CA2796215A1 - Compositions and methods for brain delivery of analgesic peptides - Google Patents
Compositions and methods for brain delivery of analgesic peptides Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- CA2796215A1 CA2796215A1 CA2796215A CA2796215A CA2796215A1 CA 2796215 A1 CA2796215 A1 CA 2796215A1 CA 2796215 A CA2796215 A CA 2796215A CA 2796215 A CA2796215 A CA 2796215A CA 2796215 A1 CA2796215 A1 CA 2796215A1
- Authority
- CA
- Canada
- Prior art keywords
- dalargin
- analgesic
- antibody
- receptors
- compound
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Granted
Links
Classifications
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C07—ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C07K—PEPTIDES
- C07K14/00—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof
- C07K14/435—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans
- C07K14/575—Hormones
- C07K14/57545—Neuropeptide Y
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K47/00—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient
- A61K47/50—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates
- A61K47/51—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent
- A61K47/68—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent the modifying agent being an antibody, an immunoglobulin or a fragment thereof, e.g. an Fc-fragment
- A61K47/6801—Drug-antibody or immunoglobulin conjugates defined by the pharmacologically or therapeutically active agent
- A61K47/6803—Drugs conjugated to an antibody or immunoglobulin, e.g. cisplatin-antibody conjugates
- A61K47/6811—Drugs conjugated to an antibody or immunoglobulin, e.g. cisplatin-antibody conjugates the drug being a protein or peptide, e.g. transferrin or bleomycin
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K47/00—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient
- A61K47/50—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates
- A61K47/51—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent
- A61K47/68—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent the modifying agent being an antibody, an immunoglobulin or a fragment thereof, e.g. an Fc-fragment
- A61K47/6835—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent the modifying agent being an antibody, an immunoglobulin or a fragment thereof, e.g. an Fc-fragment the modifying agent being an antibody or an immunoglobulin bearing at least one antigen-binding site
- A61K47/6849—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent the modifying agent being an antibody, an immunoglobulin or a fragment thereof, e.g. an Fc-fragment the modifying agent being an antibody or an immunoglobulin bearing at least one antigen-binding site the antibody targeting a receptor, a cell surface antigen or a cell surface determinant
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61P—SPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
- A61P25/00—Drugs for disorders of the nervous system
- A61P25/04—Centrally acting analgesics, e.g. opioids
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61P—SPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
- A61P25/00—Drugs for disorders of the nervous system
- A61P25/08—Antiepileptics; Anticonvulsants
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61P—SPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
- A61P29/00—Non-central analgesic, antipyretic or antiinflammatory agents, e.g. antirheumatic agents; Non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs [NSAID]
Landscapes
- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Bioinformatics & Cheminformatics (AREA)
- General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Medicinal Chemistry (AREA)
- Organic Chemistry (AREA)
- Veterinary Medicine (AREA)
- Public Health (AREA)
- Animal Behavior & Ethology (AREA)
- Pharmacology & Pharmacy (AREA)
- Molecular Biology (AREA)
- Immunology (AREA)
- Epidemiology (AREA)
- Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
- Nuclear Medicine, Radiotherapy & Molecular Imaging (AREA)
- General Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Pain & Pain Management (AREA)
- Genetics & Genomics (AREA)
- Biochemistry (AREA)
- Proteomics, Peptides & Aminoacids (AREA)
- Endocrinology (AREA)
- Toxicology (AREA)
- Zoology (AREA)
- Gastroenterology & Hepatology (AREA)
- Biophysics (AREA)
- Neurology (AREA)
- Cell Biology (AREA)
- Neurosurgery (AREA)
- Biomedical Technology (AREA)
- Rheumatology (AREA)
- Peptides Or Proteins (AREA)
- Medicines That Contain Protein Lipid Enzymes And Other Medicines (AREA)
- Medicinal Preparation (AREA)
Abstract
The present invention relates to non-invasive brain delivery technology for centrally- acting analgesic peptides. Specifically, the invention is directed to compounds comprising an antibody or fragment thereof capable of transmigrating across the blood brain barrier (BBB) and an analgesic peptide. Compositions and methods of using the compounds or compositions are also provided.
Description
COMPOSITIONS AND METHODS FOR BRAIN DELIVERY OF ANALGESIC
PEPTIDES
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to compositions and methods for brain delivery of peptides. More specifically, the present invention relates to non-invasive brain delivery technology for centrally-acting analgesic peptides.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is formed by the brain capillary endothelial cells and acts as a selective partition regulating the exchange of substances between the blood and the brain. The tight junctions of brain capillary endothelial cells prevent a majority of circulating compounds larger than 500D from reaching the brain by the paracellular route (Pardridge, 2002). Similarly, virtually no peptides, antibodies or biologics can cross the BBB in therapeutically relevant concentrations (Pardridge, 2002; Bickel et al, 2001).
There is currently no clinically approved/used approach to deliver biologics, including peptides, across the BBB after systemic injection. At present, biologics that do not cross the BBB can only be given by direct intra-cerebroventricular or intra-brain injection, by infusion through a brain-implanted pump, or by implantation of controlled-release polymers or genetically engineered cells. There are some experimental approaches that are being developed for systemic delivery of biologics, such as peptides, across the BBB
including: development of highly positively charged peptides (Herve et al, 2008);
peptides functionalized with TAT-like sequences (Muriel & Dowdy, 2006);
peptides that bind LRP receptor family (Demeule et al, 2008); and antibodies against receptors that undergo receptor-mediated transcytosis, such as transferrin receptor antibody and insulin receptor antibody Pardridge et al, 1991; Jones & Shusta, 2007).
Pain is a major symptom of many different diseases. Research defines different types of pain on the basis of their neuronal and molecular mechanisms into nociceptive pain (resulting from inflammation and injury) and neuropathic pain (resulting from nerve disease or injury). Pain sensation (nociception) is evoked by potential or actual noxious stimuli or by tissue injury, and is mediated by a combination of peripheral and central (brain) mechanisms. Peripheral mechanisms of pain result from noxious stimuli that produce inflammation, which excites and sensitizes `pain fibres'; the stimulus is transmitted through the spinal cord to the thalamocortical system in the brain where the pain sensation is given sensory discriminative aspect and affective aspect.
The mediators of peripheral pain include inflammatory mediators such as prostaglandins, bradykinin, histamine, substance P, ATP, etc (Smith, 2008; Neiderberger et al, 2008).
Drugs that prevent synthesis of inflammatory mediators (including non-steroidal and steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) have analgesic effect.
In the CNS and the peripheral system, the key pain regulators are opioid receptors.
There are 4 classes of opioid receptors: a) p receptors; b) delta (6) receptors; c) kappa (K) receptors, and d) sigma (a) receptors. These receptors are normally stimulated by endogenous peptides (endorphins, enkephalins and dynorphins) produced in response to noxious stimuli; endogenous enkephalins, for example, are relatively selective agonists of 6 receptors. The opiod receptors can also be stimulated by drugs referred to as opioid analgesics, most of which are agonists of p receptors (Trescot et al, 2008).
Pain management is accomplished through the use of analgesic drugs, which are the most used drugs of all classes. Three general classes of drugs are currently available for pain management: non-steriodal anti-inflammatories (NSAIDs), adjuvant analgesics, and opioids. NSAIDs act exclusively to reduce the inflammation and inflammatory mediators of pain (peripheral mechanisms) and are mainly used for mild to moderate pain indications. Adjuvant analgesics are used mainly for treatment of neuropathic pain and include various anti-depressants, anti-convulsants, neuroleptics, and corticosteroids.
Centrally-acting plant opiates are the most frequently used analgesics for the relief of severe pain and include morphine and many derivatives (oxycodone, dihydrocodeine, hydrocodone, fentanyl, pentazocine, loperamide, fedotozine, naloxone, naltrexone, methyl nalozone, nalmefene, cypridime, beta funaltrexamine, naloxonazine, naltrindole, and nor-binaltorphimine). These drugs act through central pain mechanisms, where they have high selectivity for and various degree of potency on p opioid receptors (Trescot et al, 2008).
Although opioid drugs can be very effective in pain management, they can cause several severe side effects, including:
PEPTIDES
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to compositions and methods for brain delivery of peptides. More specifically, the present invention relates to non-invasive brain delivery technology for centrally-acting analgesic peptides.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is formed by the brain capillary endothelial cells and acts as a selective partition regulating the exchange of substances between the blood and the brain. The tight junctions of brain capillary endothelial cells prevent a majority of circulating compounds larger than 500D from reaching the brain by the paracellular route (Pardridge, 2002). Similarly, virtually no peptides, antibodies or biologics can cross the BBB in therapeutically relevant concentrations (Pardridge, 2002; Bickel et al, 2001).
There is currently no clinically approved/used approach to deliver biologics, including peptides, across the BBB after systemic injection. At present, biologics that do not cross the BBB can only be given by direct intra-cerebroventricular or intra-brain injection, by infusion through a brain-implanted pump, or by implantation of controlled-release polymers or genetically engineered cells. There are some experimental approaches that are being developed for systemic delivery of biologics, such as peptides, across the BBB
including: development of highly positively charged peptides (Herve et al, 2008);
peptides functionalized with TAT-like sequences (Muriel & Dowdy, 2006);
peptides that bind LRP receptor family (Demeule et al, 2008); and antibodies against receptors that undergo receptor-mediated transcytosis, such as transferrin receptor antibody and insulin receptor antibody Pardridge et al, 1991; Jones & Shusta, 2007).
Pain is a major symptom of many different diseases. Research defines different types of pain on the basis of their neuronal and molecular mechanisms into nociceptive pain (resulting from inflammation and injury) and neuropathic pain (resulting from nerve disease or injury). Pain sensation (nociception) is evoked by potential or actual noxious stimuli or by tissue injury, and is mediated by a combination of peripheral and central (brain) mechanisms. Peripheral mechanisms of pain result from noxious stimuli that produce inflammation, which excites and sensitizes `pain fibres'; the stimulus is transmitted through the spinal cord to the thalamocortical system in the brain where the pain sensation is given sensory discriminative aspect and affective aspect.
The mediators of peripheral pain include inflammatory mediators such as prostaglandins, bradykinin, histamine, substance P, ATP, etc (Smith, 2008; Neiderberger et al, 2008).
Drugs that prevent synthesis of inflammatory mediators (including non-steroidal and steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) have analgesic effect.
In the CNS and the peripheral system, the key pain regulators are opioid receptors.
There are 4 classes of opioid receptors: a) p receptors; b) delta (6) receptors; c) kappa (K) receptors, and d) sigma (a) receptors. These receptors are normally stimulated by endogenous peptides (endorphins, enkephalins and dynorphins) produced in response to noxious stimuli; endogenous enkephalins, for example, are relatively selective agonists of 6 receptors. The opiod receptors can also be stimulated by drugs referred to as opioid analgesics, most of which are agonists of p receptors (Trescot et al, 2008).
Pain management is accomplished through the use of analgesic drugs, which are the most used drugs of all classes. Three general classes of drugs are currently available for pain management: non-steriodal anti-inflammatories (NSAIDs), adjuvant analgesics, and opioids. NSAIDs act exclusively to reduce the inflammation and inflammatory mediators of pain (peripheral mechanisms) and are mainly used for mild to moderate pain indications. Adjuvant analgesics are used mainly for treatment of neuropathic pain and include various anti-depressants, anti-convulsants, neuroleptics, and corticosteroids.
Centrally-acting plant opiates are the most frequently used analgesics for the relief of severe pain and include morphine and many derivatives (oxycodone, dihydrocodeine, hydrocodone, fentanyl, pentazocine, loperamide, fedotozine, naloxone, naltrexone, methyl nalozone, nalmefene, cypridime, beta funaltrexamine, naloxonazine, naltrindole, and nor-binaltorphimine). These drugs act through central pain mechanisms, where they have high selectivity for and various degree of potency on p opioid receptors (Trescot et al, 2008).
Although opioid drugs can be very effective in pain management, they can cause several severe side effects, including:
2 = respiratory depression that is proportional to their analgesia; this respiratory depression can be life-threatening. As a result, the range between the effective dose and a dose that produces respiratory depression is narrow.
Because of this narrow therapeutic index, patients receiving opioid therapy must be closely monitored for signs of respiratory failure;
= constipation in patients can be severe and may require prolonged hospitalization, or even surgical intervention;
= development of physical dependence with repeated use is a characteristic feature of the opioid drugs, and the possibility of developing drug dependence is one of the major limitations of their clinical use;
= cessation of opioid administration may result in a withdrawal syndrome.
Symptoms of withdrawal are often the opposite of the effects achieved by the drug;
These unwanted effects can severely limit the use of opioid drugs, and are the consequence of the drugs' selectivity to p opioid receptors.
There is therefore a need in the art for opioid analgesics that have a diminished likelihood of side effects, for example drugs that have selective activity on 6 receptors.
Enkephalins are endogenous opioid receptor agonists; they are potent and preferential 6 opioid receptor agonists with weak agonist effect on p receptors (Pencheva et al, 1999).
Unfortunately, these neuropeptides do not cross the blood brain barrier (BBB), undergo rapid degradation by tissue peptidases (principally amino peptidase), and have very short half-lives in the blood stream (Polt et al, 2005; Weber et al, 1991).
Many other peptides that act through mechanisms independent from opioid receptors exist (e.g., neuropeptide Y, neurotensin). However, the analgesic activity of such peptides is only exhibited when administered centrally (i.e., intra-cerebroventricularly, intra-cerebrally); no activity is observed when administered peripherally (i.e., intravenously, subcutaneously), as they do not cross the blood-brain barrier.
Therefore, there is a need for a non-invasive brain-delivery technology for centrally-acting agents. There is a further need in the art for effective agents that may be
Because of this narrow therapeutic index, patients receiving opioid therapy must be closely monitored for signs of respiratory failure;
= constipation in patients can be severe and may require prolonged hospitalization, or even surgical intervention;
= development of physical dependence with repeated use is a characteristic feature of the opioid drugs, and the possibility of developing drug dependence is one of the major limitations of their clinical use;
= cessation of opioid administration may result in a withdrawal syndrome.
Symptoms of withdrawal are often the opposite of the effects achieved by the drug;
These unwanted effects can severely limit the use of opioid drugs, and are the consequence of the drugs' selectivity to p opioid receptors.
There is therefore a need in the art for opioid analgesics that have a diminished likelihood of side effects, for example drugs that have selective activity on 6 receptors.
Enkephalins are endogenous opioid receptor agonists; they are potent and preferential 6 opioid receptor agonists with weak agonist effect on p receptors (Pencheva et al, 1999).
Unfortunately, these neuropeptides do not cross the blood brain barrier (BBB), undergo rapid degradation by tissue peptidases (principally amino peptidase), and have very short half-lives in the blood stream (Polt et al, 2005; Weber et al, 1991).
Many other peptides that act through mechanisms independent from opioid receptors exist (e.g., neuropeptide Y, neurotensin). However, the analgesic activity of such peptides is only exhibited when administered centrally (i.e., intra-cerebroventricularly, intra-cerebrally); no activity is observed when administered peripherally (i.e., intravenously, subcutaneously), as they do not cross the blood-brain barrier.
Therefore, there is a need for a non-invasive brain-delivery technology for centrally-acting agents. There is a further need in the art for effective agents that may be
3 administered non-invasively. Finally, there is a need in the art for agents with improved efficacy and superior side-effect profiles to relieve pain.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to compositions and methods for brain delivery of peptides. More specifically, the present invention relates to non-invasive brain delivery technology for centrally-acting analgesic peptides.
The present invention provides a compound comprising an antibody or fragment thereof capable of transmigrating across the blood brain barrier (BBB), and an analgesic peptide.
In the compound as described above, the antibody or fragment thereof may bind to TMEM30A. The analgesic peptide in the compound as described herein may act on opioid receptors, neuropeptide Y receptors, neurotensin receptors, galanin receptors, orexin receptors, somatostatin receptors, or any combination thereof.
The antibody or fragment thereof may comprise complementarity determining region (CDR) 1 sequence HYTMG (SEQ ID NO:1); a CDR2 sequence RITWGGDNTFYSNSVKG (SEQ ID NO:2) ; and a CDR3 sequence GSTSTATPLRVDY
(SEQ ID NO:3). The antibody or fragment thereof in the above-described compound may also comprise the sequence:
EVQLQASGGGLVQAGGSLRLSCAASGFKITHYTMGWFRQAPGKEREFVSRITWGGDN
TFYSNSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTVYLQMNSLKPEDTADYYCAAGSTSTATPLRVDYWGKG
TQVTVSS (SEQ ID NO:4), or a sequence substantially identical thereto. The antibody or fragment thereof may be a single domain antibody (sdAb).
The analgesic peptide may be an endogenous analgesic peptide, an exogenous analgesic peptide, or mutant or an analogue thereof. The analgesic peptide may be selected from the group consisting of opioid peptides, endorphins, enkephalins and dynorphins, galanin, neurotensin, neuropeptide Y, somatostatin, orexin A and B, conotoxin-derived peptides, analgesic peptides purified or derived from venoms of scorpion, cone shells, tarantula, or other species. In a specific example, the analgesic
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to compositions and methods for brain delivery of peptides. More specifically, the present invention relates to non-invasive brain delivery technology for centrally-acting analgesic peptides.
The present invention provides a compound comprising an antibody or fragment thereof capable of transmigrating across the blood brain barrier (BBB), and an analgesic peptide.
In the compound as described above, the antibody or fragment thereof may bind to TMEM30A. The analgesic peptide in the compound as described herein may act on opioid receptors, neuropeptide Y receptors, neurotensin receptors, galanin receptors, orexin receptors, somatostatin receptors, or any combination thereof.
The antibody or fragment thereof may comprise complementarity determining region (CDR) 1 sequence HYTMG (SEQ ID NO:1); a CDR2 sequence RITWGGDNTFYSNSVKG (SEQ ID NO:2) ; and a CDR3 sequence GSTSTATPLRVDY
(SEQ ID NO:3). The antibody or fragment thereof in the above-described compound may also comprise the sequence:
EVQLQASGGGLVQAGGSLRLSCAASGFKITHYTMGWFRQAPGKEREFVSRITWGGDN
TFYSNSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTVYLQMNSLKPEDTADYYCAAGSTSTATPLRVDYWGKG
TQVTVSS (SEQ ID NO:4), or a sequence substantially identical thereto. The antibody or fragment thereof may be a single domain antibody (sdAb).
The analgesic peptide may be an endogenous analgesic peptide, an exogenous analgesic peptide, or mutant or an analogue thereof. The analgesic peptide may be selected from the group consisting of opioid peptides, endorphins, enkephalins and dynorphins, galanin, neurotensin, neuropeptide Y, somatostatin, orexin A and B, conotoxin-derived peptides, analgesic peptides purified or derived from venoms of scorpion, cone shells, tarantula, or other species. In a specific example, the analgesic
4 peptide may be selected from Dalargin, neuropeptide-Y or a fragment thereof, and neurotensin.
The present invention also provides a composition comprising the compound described above and a pharmaceutically acceptable diluent, carrier, or excipient.
Formulation(s) based on the presently described invention may be developed into clinically used analgesics for the treatment of pain, including, but not limited to pain associated with arthritis, particularly osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis, post-operative pain, cancer-related pain, HIV-related pain, neuropathic pain syndromes, etc.
The advantage of compounds of the present invention over other commercially available opioids is higher selectivity to delta class of opioid receptors in the brain, which renders them less likely to cause dependency.
The present invention also provides a method of treating pain comprising administering a compound comprising an antibody or fragment thereof capable of transmigrating across the blood brain barrier (BBB) and an analgesic peptide. The compound may be as described above. In the method as described, the pain may be associated with arthritis, post-operative pain, cancer-related pain, HIV-related pain, or neuropathic pain syndromes.
The present invention further provides a method of preventing or treating epileptic seizures comprising administering a compound or a composition as described herein, wherein the analgesic peptide also has anti-epiletogenic activity. In a non-limiting example, the analgesic peptide may be NPY or a fragment thereof, galanin, or cortistatin.
The Examples herein show that the conjugate of the hexapeptide Ieu-encephalin analog Dalargin with the blood-brain barrier-permeable single domain antibody FC5 is analgesic after systemic administration. It is further demonstrated that this conjugate has anti-nociceptive (analgesic) activity when injected both intra-cerebroventricularly and systemically. Similarly, the examples show that conjugation of a 36aa fragment of neuropeptide Y, which retains the neuropeptide Y receptor binding sites of the original 97 as peptide, to FC5 also leads to analgesic activity after systemic administration.
Analysis of nociception and analgesia was performed in mice using tail-flick test (model of acute pain) and in rats using paw-flick test (Hargreaves model of chronic pain). The data supports the usefulness of the blood-brain barrier-transmigrating sdAb FC5 in improving the systemic availability and efficacy of CNS-acting peptides.
Additional aspects and advantages of the present invention will be apparent in view of the following description. The detailed description and examples, while indicating preferred embodiments of the invention, are given by way of illustration only, as various changes and modifications within the scope of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art in light of the teachings of this invention.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
These and other features of the invention will now be described by way of example, with reference to the appended drawings, wherein:
FIGURE 1 shows the scheme for chemical synthesis of FC5-Dalargin. FC5 was first conjugated to the NHS group of Sulfo-SMCC cross-linker (1); then maleimide-activated FC5-sulfo-SMCC was conjugated to reduced Dalargin-cysteine (2).
FIGURE 2 is a photograph of a 16% tricine gel electrophoresis of various component and by-products of the reactions described in Figure 1. Lane 1 - 2 pg FC5;
Lane 2- 2 fag FC5; Lane 3 - 2 pg FC5-SMCC-Dalargin (FC5-Dal); Lane 4 - 2 pg FC5; Lane 5 - 2 pg FC5-SMCC; Lane 6 - 2 fag FC5; Lane 7 - 2 tag FC5-Cy5.5; Lane 8 - 2 pg FC5. FC5 alone has molecular weight of 14kD; FC5-Dalargin showed molecular weight of 15 kDa.
FC5 conjugate with Cy5.5 (1kD) was used as a control (MW FC5-Cy5.5 = 15 kD) FIGURE 3 is a bar graph summarizing the results of transmigration of FC5 and Dalargin across in vitro model of the blood-brain barrier composed of immortalized rat brain endothelial cells and immortalized rat astrocyte-conditioned media.
FIGURE 4 shows the results of receptor binding competition assays of Dalargin and Dalargin derivatives (Dalargin-cys and Dalargin-FC5) against 30nM 3H-DAMGO in isolated rat brain membranes.
FIGURE 5 shows the latency time in tail-flick assay induced by escalating doses of morphine - determination of maximal analgesic effect. The morphine dose response was determined by injecting 3 mg/kg or 10 mg/kg of morphine subcutaneously and determining the latency of tail flick at different time points. The maximal response - 10 sec latency (cut-off time) was induced by 10 mg/kg morphine 30 min after s.c.
injection.
FIGURE 6 shows a summary of the analgesic effects of Dalargin, Dalargin-cys and Dalargin-FC5 administered intra-cerebroventricularly measured by the tail-flick assay.
FIGURE 7 shows the analgesic activity of Dalargin and FC5-Dalargin (dosage:
0.86 mg/kg Dalargin) after intra-carotid (systemic) injection in the tail-flick pain model in mice.
FIGURE 8 shows the analgesic activity of Dalargin and FC5-Dalargin (1.72 mg/kg of Dalargin) after intra-carotid (systemic) injection in the tail-flick pain model in mice.
FIGURE 9 shows the analgesic effect of 10 mg/kg morphine (administered subcutaneously) in the paw flick assay (chronic pain model).
FIGURE 10 shows the analgesic effects of Dalargin-cys at two different doses (1.08 pg and 10.8 pg) after intra-cerebroventricular injection in paw flick assay (chronic pain model).
FIGURE 11 shows the analgesic effects FC5-Dalargin (74.4 g) after intra-cerebroventricular injection in the paw flick assay (chronic pain model).
FIGURE 12 shows the analgesic effects of FC5-Dalargin after intravenous injection. The maximal analgesic effect of FC5-Dalargin was reached after 3 injections; a lack of analgesic effect for Dalargin-cys (administered intravenously) in 3 injections was observed.
FIGURE 13 shows a lack of analgesic effects of the EG2-Dalargin conjugate and of FC5 after intravenous injections (3 injections).
FIGURE 14 shows the scheme for chemical synthesis of FC5-neuropeptide Y (NPY).
FC5 was first conjugated to the NHS group of Sulfo-SMCC cross-linker (1); then maleimide-activated FC5 (FC5-smcc) was conjugated to reduced NPY-cysteamide (2).
FIGURE 15 is a photograph of 16% T-SDS-PAGE, non-reducing silver-stained gel of various components and by-products of reactions described in Figure 14. Lane #1 -molecular weigth marker; Lane #2 - 500 ng FC5; Lane #3 - 500 ng FC5-SMCC; Lane #4 - 500ng FC5-SMCC-NPY before purification; Lane #5 - 500ng Fc5-SMCC-NPY
after purification; Lane #6 - 500ng FC5; Lane #7 - 500ng NPY-cys.
FIGURE 16 shows the analgesic effects FC5-NPY (1 g) after intra-cerebroventricular injection in the paw flick assay (chronic pain model).
FIGURE 17 shows a lack of analgesic effect of NPY after two intravenous injections of 2.02 mg/kg NPY (C-term cysteamide) in each, at Oh and at 1h in paw-flick assay (chronic pain model).
FIGURE 18 shows the analgesic effect of the FC5-NPY conjugate after intravenous injections (two injections (5 mg/kg of FC5-NPY in each injection), one at Oh, one at 1 h) in paw-flick assay (chronic pain model).
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to compositions and methods for brain delivery of analgesic drugs. More specifically, the present invention relates to non-invasive brain delivery technology for centrally-acting analgesic peptides.
The present invention provides a compound for central delivery of peptides comprising an antibody or fragment thereof capable of transmigrating across the blood brain barrier (BBB) and an analgesic peptide.
The term "antibody", also referred to in the art as "immunoglobulin" (Ig), used herein refers to a protein constructed from paired heavy and light polypeptide chains; various Ig isotypes exist, including IgA, IgD, IgE, IgG, and IgM. When an antibody is correctly folded, each chain folds into a number of distinct globular domains joined by more linear polypeptide sequences. For example, the immunoglobulin light chain folds into a variable NO and a constant (CO domain, while the heavy chain folds into a variable NO
and three constant (CH, CH2, CH3) domains. Interaction of the heavy and light chain variable domains (VH and VL) results in the formation of an antigen binding region (Fv).
Each domain has a well-established structure familiar to those of skill in the art.
The light and heavy chain variable regions are responsible for binding the target antigen and can therefore show significant sequence diversity between antibodies. The constant regions show less sequence diversity, and are responsible for binding a number of natural proteins to elicit important biochemical events. The variable region of an antibody contains the antigen binding determinants of the molecule, and thus determines the specificity of an antibody for its target antigen. The majority of sequence variability occurs in six hypervariable regions, three each per variable heavy and light chain; the hypervariable regions combine to form the antigen-binding site, and contribute to binding and recognition of an antigenic determinant. The specificity and affinity of an antibody for its antigen is determined by the structure of the hypervariable regions, as well as their size, shape and chemistry of the surface they present to the antigen. Various schemes exist for identification of the regions of hypervariability, the two most common being those of Kabat and of Chothia and Lesk. Kabat et al (1991) define the "complementarity-determining regions" (CDR) based on sequence variability at the antigen-binding regions of the VH and VL domains. Chothia and Lesk (1987) define the "hypervariable loops" (H or L) based on the location of the structural loop regions in the VH and VL domains; the numbering for the hypervariable loops is defined as H1:
27-35;
H2: 52-56; and H3: 95-102 (equivalent to CDR3 of Kabat numbering) for VHNHH
domains (Chothia and Lesk, 1997). As these individual schemes define CDR and hypervariable loop regions that are adjacent or overlapping, those of skill in the antibody art often utilize the terms "CDR" and "hypervariable loop" interchangeably, and they may be so used herein. The CDR amino acids in VH and VL regions are defined herein according to the Kabat numbering system (Kabat et al. 1991).
The region outside of the CDR is referred to as the framework region (FR). The FRs provide structural integrity to the variable domain and ensure retention of the immunoglobulin fold. This characteristic structure of antibodies provides a stable scaffold upon which substantial antigen-binding diversity can be explored by the immune system to obtain specificity for a broad array of antigens (Padlan et al, 1994).
An "antibody fragment" as referred to herein may include any suitable antigen-binding antibody fragment known in the art. The antibody fragment may be obtained by manipulation of a naturally-occurring antibody, or may be obtained using recombinant methods. For example, an antibody fragment may include, but is not limited to Fv, single-chain Fv (scFV; a molecule comprising VL and VH connected with a peptide linker), Fab, Fab', F(ab')2, single domain antibody (sdAb), and multivalent presentations of these.
In a non-limiting example, the antibody fragment may be a single domain antibody (sdAb) derived from naturally-occurring sources. Heavy chain antibodies of camelid origin (Hamers-Casterman et al, 1993) lack light chains and thus their antigen binding sites consist of one domain, termed VHH. sdAb have also been observed in shark and are termed VNAR (Nuttall et al, 2003); other sdAb may be engineered based on human heavy chain sequences (Jespers et al, 2004; To et al, 2005). As used herein, "sdAb"
includes those directly isolated from VL, VH, VHH or VNAR reservoir of any origin through phage display or other display technologies and those generated through further modification of such sdAb by humanization, affinity maturation, stabilization, solubilisation (e.g., camelization), or other methods of antibody engineering.
Also encompassed byt the present invention are homologues, derivatives, or fragments that retain the antigen-binding function and specificity of the sdAb.
A person of skill in the art would be well-acquainted with the structure of a single-domain antibody (see, for example, 3DWT, 2P42 in Protein Data Bank). An sdAb comprises a single immunoglobulin domain that retains the immuglobulin fold; most notably, only three CDR form the antigen-binding site. However, and as would be understood by those of skill in the art, not all CDR may be required for binding the antigen. For example, and without wishing to be limiting, one, two, or three of the CDR may contribute to binding and recognition of the antigen by the sdAb. The CDR of the sdAb are referred to herein as CDR1, CDR2, and CDR3, and are numbered based on Kabat numbering (Kabat et al. 1991).
By "capable of transmigrating across the BBB", it is meant that the antibody or fragment thereof crosses the blood-brain barrier; such antibodies or fragments may be used to carry other molecules, such as therapeutics, for delivery to the brain tissue.
The antibody or fragment thereof may be any suitable antibody or fragment thereof known in the art to transmigrate the BBB.
In one example, the antibody or fragment thereof may bind to transmembrane protein 30A (TMEM30A), or isoforms, variants, portions, or fragments thereof. Without wishing to be limiting in any manner, TMEM30A may be an isoform or as shown in SEQ ID
NOs:
11-13 or an extracellular fragments as shown in SEQ ID NO:14 (as described by WO
2007/036021), or sequences substantially identical thereto.
The antibody or fragment thereof may comprise a complementarity determining region (CDR) 1 sequence of HYTMG (SEQ ID NO:1); a CDR2 sequence of RITWGGDNTFYSNSVKG (SEQ ID NO:2); and a CDR3 sequence of GSTSTATPLRVDY
(SEQ ID NO:3).
The terms "antibody" and "antibody fragment" ("fragment thereof") are as defined above.
As previously stated, the antibody or fragment thereof may be a sdAb. The sdAb may be of camelid origin, and thus may be based on camelid framework regions;
alternatively, the CDR may be grafted onto other antibody domains, for example but not limited to VNAR or human VH or VL framework regions. In yet another alternative, the CDR described above may be grafted onto the framework regions of other types of antibody fragments (Fv, scFv, Fab). The present embodiment further encompasses an antibody fragment that is "humanized" using any suitable method know in the art, for example, but not limited to CDR grafting and veneering. Humanization of an antibody or antibody fragment comprises replacing an amino acid in the sequence with its human counterpart, as found in the human consensus sequence, without loss of antigen-binding ability or specificity; this approach reduces immunogenicity of the antibody or fragment thereof when introduced into human subjects. In the process of CDR grafting, one or more than one of the heavy chain CDR defined herein may be fused or grafted to a human variable region (VH, or VL), or to other human antibody fragment framework regions (Fv, scFv, Fab). In such a case, the conformation of said one or more than one hypervariable loop is preserved, as is the affinity and specificity for its target (i.e., TMEM30A). CDR grafting is known in the art and is described in at least the following:
US Patent No. 6180370, US Patent No. 5693761, US Patent No. 6054297, US Patent No. 5859205, and European Patent No. 626390. Veneering, also referred to in the art as "variable region resurfacing", involves humanizing solvent-exposed positions of the antibody or fragment; thus, buried non-humanized residues, which may be important for CDR conformation, are preserved while the potential for immunological reaction against solvent-exposed regions is minimized. Veneering is known in the art and is described in at least the following: US Patent No. 5869619, US Patent No. 5766886, US
Patent No.
5821123, and European Patent No. 519596. Persons of skill in the art would be amply familiar with methods of preparing such humanized antibody fragments.
Without wishing to be limiting in any manner, the antibody or fragment thereof may comprise the FC5 sdAb described by Muruganandam et aI, in WO 2002/057445. In a specific, non-limiting example, the antibody or fragment thereof may comprise the sequence EVQLQASGGGLVQAGGSLRLSCAASGFKITHYTMGWFRQAPGKEREFVSRITWGGDN
TFYSNSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTVYLQMNSLKPEDTADYYCAAGSTSTATPLRVDYWGKG
TQVTVSS (SEQ ID NO:4), or a sequence substantially identical thereto.
A substantially identical sequence may comprise one or more conservative amino acid mutations. It is known in the art that one or more conservative amino acid mutations to a reference sequence may yield a mutant peptide with no substantial change in physiological, chemical, or functional properties compared to the reference sequence; in such a case, the reference and mutant sequences would be considered "substantially identical" polypeptides. Conservative amino acid mutation may include addition, deletion, or substitution of an amino acid; in a non-limiting example, the conservative amino acid mutation is a conservative amino acid substitution. A conservative amino acid substitution is defined herein as the substitution of an amino acid residue for another amino acid residue with similar chemical properties (e.g. size, charge, or polarity).
A conservative amino acid substitution may substitute a basic, neutral, hydrophobic, or acidic amino acid for another of the same group. By the term "basic amino acid" it is meant hydrophilic amino acids having a side chain pK value of greater than 7, which are typically positively charged at physiological pH. Basic amino acids include histidine (His or H), arginine (Arg or R), and lysine (Lys or K). By the term "neutral amino acid" (also "polar amino acid"), it is meant hydrophilic amino acids having a side chain that is uncharged at physiological pH, but which has at least one bond in which the pair of electrons shared in common by two atoms is held more closely by one of the atoms.
Polar amino acids include serine (Ser or S), threonine (Thr or T), cysteine (Cys or C), tyrosine (Tyr or Y), asparagine (Asn or N), and glutamine (Gin or Q). The term "hydrophobic amino acid" (also "non-polar amino acid") is meant to include amino acids exhibiting a hydrophobicity of greater than zero according to the normalized consensus hydrophobicity scale of Eisenberg (1984). Hydrophobic amino acids include proline (Pro or P), isoleucine (Ile or I), phenylalanine (Phe or F), valine (Val or V), leucine (Leu or L), tryptophan (Trp or W), methionine (Met or M), alanine (Ala or A), and glycine (Gly or G).
"Acidic amino acid" refers to hydrophilic amino acids having a side chain pK
value of less than 7, which are typically negatively charged at physiological pH.
Acidic amino acids include glutamate (Glu or E), and aspartate (Asp or D).
Sequence identity is used to evaluate the similarity of two sequences; it is determined by calculating the percent of residues that are the same when the two sequences are aligned for maximum correspondence between residue positions. Any known method may be used to calculate sequence identity; for example, computer software is available to calculate sequence identity. Without wishing to be limiting, sequence identity can be calculated by software such as NCBI BLAST2 service maintained by the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics (and as found at http://ca.expasy.org/tools/blast/), BLAST-P, Blast-N, or FASTA-N, or any other appropriate software that is known in the art.
The substantially identical sequences ("substantially identical thereto") of the present invention may be at least 80% identical; in another example, the substantially identical sequences may be at least 80, 85, 90, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, or 100% identical at the amino acid level to sequences described herein. Importantly, the substantially identical sequences retain the activity and specificity of the reference sequence. As would be known to one of skill in the art, certain amino acid residues within the framework regions of an antibody may be mutated (substituted or deleted) without affecting the functional properties of the antibody (antigen recognition and binding).
The compound of the present invention provides the antibody or fragment thereof linked to an analgesic peptide.
By the term "analgesic peptide", it is meant a protein sequence that exhibits an analgesic effect. The analgesic peptide may act on opioid receptors (such as p receptors, delta (6) receptors, kappa (K) receptors, sigma (6) receptors), neuropeptide Y receptors (such as Y1-Y6), neurotensin receptors (such as NTS1 and NTS2), galanin receptors (such as GaIR1 and GaIR2), orexin A and B receptors (such as OX1 and OX2), cortistatin receptors (such as SST1 to 5), or any combination thereof. The analgesic peptides may be endogenous peptides (such as endorphins, enkephalins and dynorphins, galanin, neurotensin, neuropeptide Y, somatostatin, orexin A and B), exogenous peptides (such as conotoxin-derived peptides, analgesic peptides purified from venoms of scorpion, cone shells (such as conotoxins, ziconotide), tarantula, or other species), or mutants or analogues thereof. In a non-specific, non-limiting example, the analgesic peptide may be selected from Dalargin, neuropeptide Y, and neurotensin.
By the term "linked", also referred to herein as "conjugated", it is meant that the antibody or fragment thereof is linked directly or indirectly (e.g., via a linker), covalently or non-covalently (e.g., adsorption, ionic interaction) to the analgesic peptide. A
covalent linkage may be achieved through a chemical cross-linking reaction, through fusion using recombinant DNA methodology combined with any peptide expression system, such as bacteria, yeast or mammalian cell-based systems, or a combination thereof.
Methods for linking the analgesic peptide to the antibody or fragment thereof would be well known to a person of skill in the art.
For example, and without wishing to be limiting in any manner, the present invention provides a compound comprising the FC5 sdAb linked to the enkephalin analogue Dalargin (Tyr-[D-Ala]-Gly-Phe-Leu-Arg; SEQ ID NO:5). The Dalargin peptide, which has D-Ala in second position in order to prevent enzymatic destruction, is used as a therapy for peripheral ulcers, and from this application it is known that Dalargin is stable in the blood stream (Weber et al, 1991). Independent of its anti-ulcer activity, Dalargin exhibits potent analgesic activity following intra-ventricular injection into the brain (Polt et al, 2005). However, it does not produce analgesia when given peripherally (Weber et al, 1991). From this it can be concluded that Dalargin, when administered into the blood stream, does not penetrate through the BBB in sufficient amounts to cause central nervous system (CNS) action. Dalargin has analgesic effect only after direct injection into the brain (Smith, 2008; Polt et al, 2005).
Another non-limiting example provides a compound comprising the FC5 sdAb linked to neuropeptide Y (NPY), which comprises the sequence:
MLGNKRLGLSGLTLALSLLVCLGALAEAYPSKPDNPGEDAPAEDMARYYSALRHYINLI
TRQRYGKRSSPETLISDLLMRESTENVPRTRLEDPAMW (SEQ ID NO:6), or to a fragment thereof. The fragment may be any fragment that is effective as an analgesic peptide, and that retains at least one of the neuropeptide Y
receptor binding sites of the original peptide; for example, the fragment of NPY may comprise, but is not limited to YPSKPDNPGEDAPAEDMARYYSALRHYINLITRQRY (SEQ ID NO:7).
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is the most abundant peptide in the human CNS, preferentially expressed in GABA-ergic interneurons and is a potent presynaptic inhibitor of glutamate-mediated synaptic actions. The peptide has various physiological functions mediated by several receptor types, Y1-Y6, which all belong to the G-protein coupled receptor superfamily. It is also important in cardiovascular physiology, feeding, anxiety and depression. NPY has analgesic effect through actions on Y1 receptors expressed in the dorsal horn, and anti-epileptogenic effect through action on Y2 receptors expressed in the hippocampus. NPYergic system may be a good target for the treatment of pharmaco-resistant forms of temporal lobe epilepsy, by acting on hyperexcitability, neuronal death or brain repair (Xapelli et al., 2006). In order to achieve new NPY-based analgesic and antiepileptic strategies, NPY needs to be able to reach its targets in the brain. This is currently possible only by direct intra-cerebroventricular injection of the peptide, because systemically injected peptide does not cross the blood-brain barrier (Woldbye, 1998).
Dalargin, or NPY or fragment thereof may be linked or conjugated to the FC5 via any method described above and known in the art. For example, and without wishing to be limiting in any manner, a cysteamide-OH residue may be placed at the N- or C-terminal of the peptide (using recombinant methods, during peptide synthesis, or by other methods) and the resulting peptide may be conjugated to the antibody or fragment thereof (which may be provided with a Sulfo-SMCC cross-linker) using chemistries known in the art, such as that shown in Figure 1 and/or 14.
The conjugation of the two molecules renders them pharmacologically effective after systemic injection, as shown in the present Examples. Specifically, both the Dalargin-FC5 and NPY-FC5 conjugates were shown to have analgesic effects after systemic administration, indicating their transmigration across the BBB and action on central receptors. The Dalargin-FC5 formulation acts on both 6 and p central opioid receptors, in contrast to other centrally-acting opioids that bind selectively p receptors.
Because of this mechanism of action, the Dalargin-FC5 formulation is less likely to cause addiction and other side effects mediated through p receptors. NPY-FC5 acts on several types of receptors, of which Y1 are responsible for measured analgesic effect. In addition, and by virtue of NPY-FC5 being delivered to the brain after systemic injection, as demonstrated by analgesic effect, NPY-FC5 could have other beneficial therapeutic effects mediated via other receptors, most notably anti-epileptogenic effect through Y2 receptors.
The present invention also provides compositions or formulations comprising the compounds described herein. The compositions or formulations may further comprise pharmaceutically acceptable diluents, carriers, or excipients. By the term "pharmaceutically acceptable", it is meant that the diluent, carrier, or excipient is compatible with the compound of the present invention, and is not deleterious to the recipient of the composition. The diluent, carrier, or excipient may be any suitable diluent, carrier, or excipient known in the art, and may vary based on the route of administration and dosage required.
The compounds and formulations of the presently described invention may be developed into clinically used analgesics for the treatment of pain, including, but not limited to pain associated with arthritis, particularly osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis, post-operative pain, cancer-related pain, HIV-related pain, neuropathic pain syndromes, etc. The advantage of compounds of the present invention over other commercially available opioids is their decreased likeliness to cause dependency.
The present invention further provides a method of treating pain comprising administering a compound or a composition as described herein. The method as described may be used for the treatment of pain, including, but not limited to pain associated with arthritis, particularly osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis, post-operative pain, cancer-related pain, HIV-related pain, neuropathic pain syndromes, or other types of pain.
The present invention will be further illustrated in the following examples.
However, it is to be understood that these examples are for illustrative purposes only and should not be used to limit the scope of the present invention in any manner.
Example 1: FC5 sdAb cloning, expression and purification FC5 single domain antibody (sdAb) was cloned, expressed and purified in preparation for conjugation to analgesic peptides. FC5 was expressed in fusion with His5 and c-myc tags) to allow for purification by immobilized metal affinity chromatography using HiTrap ChelatingTM column and for detection by immunochemistry, respectively.
Briefly, DNA encoding sdAb FC5 (SEQ ID NO:12) was cloned into the Bbsl/BamHI
sites of plasmid pSJF2 to generate expression vector for FC5 (Muruganandam et al, 2002).
The DNA constructs were confirmed by nucleotide sequencing on 373A DNA
Sequencer Stretch (PE Applied Biosystems) using primers fdTGIII, 5'-GTGAAAAAATTATTATTATTCGCAATTCCT-3' (SEQ ID NO:8) and 96GIII, 5'-CCCTCATAGTTAGCGTAACG-3' (SEQ ID NO:9).
Single clones of recombinant antibody-expressing bacteria E. coli strain TG1 were used to inoculate 100 ml of M9 medium containing 100 fag/ml of ampicillin, and the culture was shaken overnight at 200 rpm at 37 C. The grown cells (25 ml) were transferred into 1 L
of M9 medium (0.2% glucose, 0.6% Na2HPO4, 0.3% KH2PO4, 0.1 % NH4CI, 0.05%
NaCl, 1 mM MgCI2, 0.1 mM CaCl2) supplemented with 5 pg/ml of vitamin B1, 0.4%
casamino acid, and 100 pg/ml of ampicillin. The cell culture was shaken at room temperature for 24 hours at 200 rpm and subsequently supplemented with 100 ml of 1OX induction medium Terrific Broth containing 12% Tryptone, 24% yeast extract, and 4%
glycerol.
Protein expression was induced by adding isopropyl-p-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG; 1 mM). After induction, the culture was shaken for an additional 72 hours at 25 C, and the periplasmic fraction was extracted by the osmotic shock method.
The FC5 sdAb was purified by immobilized metal-affinity chromatography using HiTrap ChelatingTM column (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech; Piscataway, NJ). Bound FC5 was eluted in 10 mM HEPES buffer, 500 mM NaCl, pH 7.0, with a 10-500 mM imidazole gradient and peak fractions were extensively dialyzed against 10 mM HEPES
buffer, 150 mM NaCl, 3.4 mM EDTA, pH 7.4.
Example 2: FC5-Dalargin conjugation The FC5 sdAb prepared in Example 1 was conjugated to Dalargin, as described below.
4mg of dialyzed FC5 from Example 1 was placed in a 1.5-ml micro-centrifuge tube.
Sulfo-SMCC was added to the FC5 in a 10x molar ratio; specifically, 232pl of 5mg/ml Sulfo-SMCC was added. The micro-centrifuge tube containing the mixture was then flushed with nitrogen gas and incubated for 2 hours at room temperature (RT).
Once the reaction is done, the unreacted Sulfo-SMCC was removed from the maleimide-activated FC5 using Millipore Amicon Ultra-4, Ultracel 3K column. The solution was added to the column, the volume was completed to 4 ml with PBS, and the mixture was spun at 4000xg for 13 minutes at 10 C. This process was repeated once more, and the product was washed 3 times.
Separately, and during the above steps, Dalargin-cysteamide-OH (Dalarin-cys) was reduced with TCEP. A 5mg/ml stock of Dalargin-cys dissolved in PBS was prepared and flushed with N2. Similarly, a 100mM TCEP solution in N2 flushed milli-Q
H2O. Then, 58 pl of the 100 mM TCEP was added to 261.5pl of 5mg/ml Dalargin-cys and 11 pI
of 0.5M EDTA. The mixture was then flushed with nitrogen, sealed and incubated at RT for 30 minutes.
The purified maleimide-activated FC5 was mixed with the reduced Dalargin-cys, flushed with nitrogen, sealed and incubated at RT for 90 minutes and then overnight at 4 C. The next day, the unreacted Dalargin and the TCEP were removed using Millipore Amicon Ultra-4, Ultracel 3K column. The solution was added to the column, the volume was completed to 4 ml with PBS, and the mixture was spun at 4000xg for 13 minutes at C. This process was repeated once more, and the product was washed 3 times.
The samples were then run on a 16% tricine gel (at 125 Volts for 2.5 hr at 4 C) to confirm shift in molecular weight size after conjugation. Figure 2 is a photograph of the 16% tricine gel electrophoresis of various component and by-products of the reactions.
Successful conjugation of FC5 sdAb to Dalargin-cysteamide (-1 kD) is shown.
alone has molecular weight of 14kD; FC5-Dalargin showed molecular weight of 15 kDa.
FC5 conjugate with Cy5.5 (1kD) was used as a control (MW FC5-Cy5.5 = 15 kD).
Example 3: Transport of the FC5-Dalargin across in vitro blood brain barrier model To show that the FC5-Dalargin conjugate (Example 2) maintains the blood-brain barrier permeability of FC5, an in vitro assay was used as described below.
FC5 and FC5-Dalargin were labelled by covalent conjugation to Cy5.5 N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) ester using methods recommended by the manufacturer (GE
Healthcare). Cy5.5 NHS was bound to FC5 through a thioether covalent bond.
Immortalized Adult Rat brain endothelial cells (ARBEC) were used as the in vitro blood brain barrier model. ARBEC (80,000 cells/membrane) were seeded on a 0.5%
gelatine-coated Falcon tissue culture inserts (pore size-1 pm; surface area 0.83 cm2) in 1 ml of growth medium. The bottom chamber of the insert assembly contained 2 ml of growth medium supplemented with the fetal human astrocyte-conditioned medium in a 1:1 (v/v) ratio.
Transport studies were performed 7 days post-seeding. Filter inserts were rinsed with transport buffer (PBS containing 5 mM glucose, 5 mM MgCI2, 10 mM HEPES, 0.05%
BSA, pH 7.4) and allowed to equilibrate at 37 C for 30 minutes. Experiments were initiated by adding 10 pg/ml Cy5.5-labelled FC5-Dalargin or Cy5.5-labelled FC5 to the apical chamber. Aliquots (100 pl) were collected from the opposite chamber at various time intervals (5, 15, 30, 60, 120 minutes) and replaced with fresh buffer.
The amount of FC5-Dalargin transported across HCEC monolayers was determined by fluorescence in a fluorescence plate reader. To control for ARBEC membrane integrity and to estimate paracellular diffusion, the apical-to-basolateral and basolateral-to-apical clearance rates of [14C]-sucrose was determined and calculated essentially as previously described (Muruganandam et al, 2002; Garberg et al, 2005) across the same monolayers used for FC5-Dalargin transport studies. Sample-associated radioactivity was measured using a Mircobeta Trilux liquid scintillation counter (Wallac, Finland). Sucrose permeability Pe (0-30 min) was calculated to be 0.829 x 10-3 cm/min indicative of an integral cell monolayer.
Results are summarized in Figure 3. FC5-Dalargin transmigrated across the blood-brain barrier composed of immortalized rat brain endothelial cells in this model to a level similar to FC5 alone. The results indicate that FC5-Dalargin conjugate retained the ability to cross the BBB (function of FC5). Permeability co-efficients (Pe) were as follows: FC5 = 0.195 x 10-3 cm/ min; and FC5-Dalargin = 0.250 x 10-3 cm/ min.
A
negative control single domain antibody with a molecular weight of 13 kDa equal to molecular weight of FC5 was used for comparison and gave a Pe of 0.077 x 10-3 cm/
min.
Example 4: Opioid receptor-binding studies To demonstrate that the FC5-Dalargin conjugate of Example 2 maintains opioid receptor binding activity, displacement studies were done against radiolabelled 3H-DAMGO, a p receptor agonist, in isolated rat brain membranes.
FC5 antibody binds to brain capillaries, therefore to exclude the binding of FC5 in the Dalargin-FC5 formulation, capillary depletion was initially performed.
Briefly, adult rat brain cortices were homogenized by hand in buffer A (103 mM NaCl, 4.7 mM KCI, 2.5 mM CaCI2, 1.2 mM KH2PO4, 1.2 mM MgSO4r 15 mM HEPES) in a 1/3.5 (w/v) dilution (this volume is referred to as 1 Volume). An equal volume of 30% dextran was then added to yield a final concentration of 15% dextran. The homogenate was centrifuged at 5800 x g (10,000 rpm; Beckman L8-70 Ultracentrifuge, Rotor: SW 40) for 20 min at 4 degrees. The upper parenchyma layer was then collected and centrifuged under the same conditions. The upper parenchyma layer was again collected, and 1 Volume of 50mM Tris-buffer pH 7.4 containing [2X] of protease inhibitor was added to the collected parenchyma. The mixture was homogenized using a motorized pestle. The homogenate was centrifuged at 46,000 x g for 15 minutes at 4 C. The supernatant was removed and the pellet re-suspended in 1 Volume Tris-buffer pH 7.4 containing [2X] of protease inhibitor. The re-suspended pellet was incubated at 37 C for 15 minutes with agitation in a 50 ml conical tube to dissociate endogenous opioids from receptors. After incubation, the homogenate was centrifuged at 46,000 x g for 15 minutes at 4 C. The supernatant was again removed and the pellet re-suspended in 1 to 1.5 Volume Tris-buffer pH 7.4 containing [1X] of protease inhibitor. The membrane preparation was aliquoted into 1.5 ml tubes in 1 ml samples and stored at -80 C.
Opioid Receptor binding assay used a p opioid receptor agonist, 3H-DAMGO, to bind to opioid receptors present in the rat brain membrane preparation. Displacement studies were done with unlabelled ligands, Dalargin, and Dalargin-FC5. Briefly, diluted reagents were prepared using 50mM Tris-buffer pH7.4, as follows:
i. 1 pM 3H-DAMGO: 0.25pl 20mM 3H-DAMGO and 5m1 Tris-buffer;
ii. 500nM Dalargin: 3.62p1 1.38mM Dalargin and 10ml Tris-buffer;
iii. 500nM Dalargin-cys: 3.94pl 1.27mM Dalargin-cys and 10ml Tris-buffer;
iv. 500nM FC5-Dal: 16.67pl 30pM FC5-Dal and 1 ml Tris-buffer;
v. 500nM FC5: 2.73p1 183pM FC5 and 1 ml Tris-buffer.
200pl of membrane preparation (7.15mg/ml; diluted 1:3 in Tris buffer) was added to each well of a 96-well plate. Tris-buffer was added to each well, followed by a range of Dalargin concentrations, followed by 3H-DAMGO. The reaction mixture was left at RT
with gentle orbital shaking for 1.5 hr. A scintillation cocktail was then added and radioactive counts were measured using beta scintillation counter.
To calculate IC50 and K; value for Dalargin formulas, DPM values were first converted to molar units using the equation: Molar concentration of labelled ligand [L] =
(specific counts)*(1/2200000)*(1/specific activity)*1000. Specific activity for 3H-DAMGO
was 56.8 Ci/mmol. Percentage specific bound at each concentration of unlabelled competitor was calculated using the formula: % specific bound = Bound/Total bound *100. K;
values are calculated from the obtained IC50 values by the Cheng and Prusoff equation: K;
=IC50/(1+L/Kd), where L and Kd are the concentration and affinity of the radiolabelled ligand 3H-DAMGO. The IC50 value was calculated by GraphPad Prism. K; value is the inhibition constant for the opioid (i.e, the concentration of competing ligand in a competition assay which would occupy 50% of the receptors if no radioligand were present).
Results of receptor binding competition assays are shown in Figure 4. FC5 antibody alone did not displace 3H-DAMGO. However, FC5-Dalargin demonstrated similar displacement potency to Dalargin-cys, and both were only slightly less potent than Dalargin, suggesting that FC5-Dalargin conjugate retains opioid receptor-binding activity.
Example 5: Analgesic Activity of FC5-Dalargin in Acute Pain (Tail flick assay) The Tail Flick assay was used to measure the analgesic activity of the FC5-Dalargin conjugate of Example 2. This assay is a pain receptive assay in which a mouse is placed within a restraining tube with its tail protruding. The tail is placed on a level surface, a radiant heat is applied to the tail and the latency of the mouse to remove its tail from the heat is recorded. This latency is used as a measure to indicate analgesic activity of injected compounds - analgesia is demonstrated by an increase in time to occurrence of a tail flick response. All procedures using animals were approved by the institutional animal care committee and complied with the guidelines established by the Canadian Council on Animal Care.
Male CD-1 mice (23-25 g) were obtained from Charles River and bred locally; 6-8 week old mice were used in the assay. The IITC Model 336 Plantar/Tail Analgesic Meter with True tail Temp and Heated Glass was used for the tail flick assay. In order to acclimatize the mice to the machine, each mouse was briefly placed in the restraining tube 2-3 times before the test occurred. Intensity of the lamp was adjusted to produce a latency time of 3-4 sec. The cut-off latency time (a time when the experiment is terminated) was set at 10 sec. Baseline values for tail flick latency time were determined before drug administration in each animal. Basal tail flick latency time was 3 1 seconds.
Immediately after setting/testing baseline latency time, animals were lightly anaesthetized with isoflurane and received either intra-cerebroventricular injection or intra-carotid injection of FC5-Dalargin, FC5, or Dalargin.
For intra-cerebroventricular injections, a longitudinal incision was made in the scalp to identify the bregma; then animals received a unilateral 5pl intra-cerebroventricular injection of either FC5-Dalargin or Dalargin alone approximately 2mm caudal and 1 mm lateral with respect to the bregma, and 3 mm ventral from the skull surface.
Injections were made using a Hamilton syringe equipped with a 25-gauge needle. Injection depth was controlled by a plug on the needle to prevent more than 2 mm penetration beyond the skull surface.
For intra-carotid injections, anesthesia was induced with 4% isoflurane and maintained with 2.7% isoflurane in 69% N20 and 30% 02 using a vaporizer. The left common carotid artery (CCA) was exposed and a catheter made from PE10 tubing was introduced and secured in place. A temporary ligature was placed on the left external carotid artery (ECA). In one experiment, an equimolar dose of 30 nmole of FC5-Dalargin or Dalargin alone (approx 0.86 mg/kg of Dalargin in each composition) was injected into the internal carotid artery via the CCA. In another experiment, an equimolar dose of 62 nmole of FC5-Dalargin or Dalargin alone (approximately 1.72 mg/kg of Dalargin) was also injected into the internal carotid artery via the CCA. The catheter was then removed and the CCA
was permanently tied off; the ligature of the ECA was removed. A small amount of 2%
xylocaine gel was applied to the inner surface of the wound, which was sutured closed.
Following the intra-carotid injections or intra-cerebroventricular injections, the animals were tested for tail flick latencies at 5, 10, 15, 30, 45 and 90 minutes post-injection. The nociceptive sensitivity was determined by converting the recorded analgesic tail-flick times to a percent maximal possible effect (%MPE):
% MPE = [(recorded flick time -baseline) / (maximum time (10 s) - baseline)] X
The analgesic effect of FC5-Dalargin injected intra-cerebroventricularly (Figure 6) or systemically at two doses, 0.86 mg/kg (Figure 7) and 1.72 mg/kg (Figure 8), was compared ('benchmarked') against the maximal effect of morphine at two doses (3 mg/kg, and 10 mg/kg) injected subcutaneously (Figure 5). All animals injected with the mg/kg of morphine showed maximally allowed latency of 10 sec, 30 min after injection. 3mg/kg of morphine (s.c) produced approximately 50% of the maximal analgesic effect (observed with 10 mg/kg morphine) (Figure 5).
Figure 6 shows the analgesic activity of Dalargin and Dalargin-FC5 administered intra-cerebroventricularly as described above. Dalargin and Dalargin-cys showed a similar analgesic effect reaching maximal latency of response, essentially comparable to that induced by 10 mg/kg morphine (Figure 5), 15-min and 30-min after injection and returning to basal levels 60 min after injection. FC5-Dalargin induced maximal analgesia 30 min after injection that reached 40% of maximum effect and which persisted at 10-15 % above basal levels for up to 90 min. Optimization of the dosage may result in greater % of maximum effect.
Results for the analgesic activity of Dalargin and FC5-Dalargin after intra-carotid injection at 0.86 mg/kg and 1.72 mg/kg are shown in Figure 7 and Figure 8, respectively.
Table 1 gives a comparison of %MPE among two subcutaneous doses of morphine (see Example 6), two intra-carotid does of Dalargin, and two intra-carotid doses of Dalargin-FC5 at 30 min following injection Table 1. Comparison of %MPE for morphine, Dalargin and FC5-Dalargin.
Treatment %MPE (30 min) Morphine (10mg/kg sc) 100%
Morphine (3mg/kg sc) 56%
Dalargin (0.86mg/kg ic) 19%
Dalargin (1.72mg/kg ic) 17%
FC5-Dal (0.86mg/kg ic) 63%
FC5-Dal (1.72mg/kg ic) 66%
No analgesic effect was observed after the intra-carotid injection of Dalargin; this is consistent with previous observations that Dalargin does not cross the BBB and has no analgesic effects after systemic administration. After intra-carotid injection of FC5-Dalargin, increased latency times reaching 63% and 66% of a maximal latency induced by 10 mg/kg morphine were observed 30 minutes after administration of the conjugate.
Example 6: Analgesic Activity of FC5-Dalargin in Chronic Pain (Paw flick assay) The Paw Flick test, also known as the Hargreaves Method, was used to measure the analgesic activity of the FC5-Dalargin conjugate of Example 2 in chronic pain.
Chronic inflammatory pain was induced in 4-6 week old male Wistar rats, by a intra-plantar (i.pl.) injection (100 pl with a 30-gauge needle) of complete Freund's adjuvant in sterile water in a ratio of 1:1 in the right hind paw under brief isoflurane anesthesia (3%).
Three days after CFA injection the putative antinociceptive effect of different compounds was quantified by measuring latencies of withdrawal of both hind limb paws (ipsilateral and contralateral to CFA injection) in response to radiant heat using digitalized plantar Analgesia Meter for paw stimulation (IITC Model # 336TG Life Science, Inc.). A
rapid paw withdrawal on the side of CFA injection (compared to the contralateral non-injected paw) was indicative of inflammatory pain. During the training period (before experiments), the light-intensity lamp was adjusted to elicit baseline paw withdrawal latencies between 17 to 20 s (in rats). If a withdrawal response does not occur within 20 s, the light beam was automatically turned off and the animal was assigned the maximum score. Results were analyzed as temporal courses of paw withdrawal latency (sec) versus time (min or hrs) and expressed as % of maximum possible effect (%MPE) as described in Example 5. A subcutaneous injection of morphine 10 mg/kg served as a positive control.
Intra-cerebroventricular injection: For intra-cerebroventricular injections in rats, a longitudinal incision was made in the scalp to identify the bregma; then animals received a unilateral 5p1 intra-cerebroventricular injection of either FC5-Dalargin or Dalargin alone approximately 0.8 mm anterioposterior (AP) level of bregma, 1.5mm with respect to the midline and 3.5 mm ventral from the skull surface. Injections were made using a Hamilton syringe equipped with a 25-gauge needle. Injection depth was controlled by a plug on the needle to prevent more than 3.5 mm penetration beyond the skull surface.
Subcutaneous injection of morphine at 10 mg/kg (control) resulted in prompt increase in CFA-injected paw withdrawal latency to values of the contralateral, non-inflamed paw lasting for 60 min and slowly diminishing over subsequent 3 hours (Figure 9).
Intra-cerebroventricular (icv) injection of Dalargin-cys (Figure 10) at 2 doses showed a significant analgesic effect, i.e., increase latency of inflamed paw withdrawal; a lower dose of 1.08 g achieved 75% of maximal effect, whereas a 10.08 g dose resulted in 100% MPE, with a profile similar to that obtained with morphine (Figure 9).
Similarly, icv injection of FC5-Dalargin (74.4 g - corresponding to the higher dose of Dalargin-cys from Figure 10) resulted in complete analgesia sustained over 120 min (Figure 11). IPBS
injection served as control in these experiments (Figure 11, open squares) to control for `wash-out' of analgesic used during surgical procedure of icv injections. As shown in Figure 11, the analgesic effect of anaesthesia received during the injection procedure disappears 30 min after the procedure; hence, analgesic effect observed with Dalargin lasting over 120 min is caused by intrinsic activity of Dalargin on opioid receptors and not by anaesthesia received during injection procedures.
Intravenous injection: FC5-Dalargin was then injected intravenously (in the tail vein;
7mg/kg) and its analgesic effect was compared to Dalargin-cys (0.34 mg/kg;
reflecting the Dalargin dose in FC5-Dalargin construct), to FC5 (7 mg/kg) and to the construct of Dalargin with a control anti-EGFR single domain antibody, EG2, that does not cross the blood brain barrier (EG2-Dalargin; 7 mg/kg). Given the short systemic half life of Dalargin, FC5, and FC5- and EG2-Dalargin formulations, three i.v. injections of each compound were delivered at 0, 1, and 2 hours, and the analgesic effect was monitored in paw flick assay every 15-min over a 7-hour period. Dalargin-cys did not increase latency of withdrawal of the inflamed paw at any time during and after three i.v. dosing (Figure 12, open squares). In contrast, FC5-Dalargin induced cumulative analgesia after each i.v. dosing, reaching 100% MPE 45min-1 hour after the third injection and gradually `washing-out' over a subsequent three hours (Figure 12, closed triangles), similar to what was observed after intra-cerebroventricular injections of Dalargin-cys and FC5-Dalargin (Figures 10 and 11). If Fc5-Dalargin injection was given 4th time at 3 h (Figure 12, open polygons), the 'wash-out' (i.e., disappearance of analgesic effect) was somewhat extended. Neither FC5 alone nor EG2-Dalargin construct induced any analgesic effect when administered in the same manner (i.e., 3 injections at 0, 1, and 2h) (Figure 13). These date demonstrate that, while Dalargin is potent analgesic when administered centrally, it is ineffective when administered peripherally because it does not cross the blood-brain barrier. When Dalargin is functionalized with the blood-brain barrier `carrier' single domain antibody, FC5, Dalargin becomes efficacious in inducing analgesia in chronic pain because FC5 enables its delivery across the blood brain barrier to the sites of its pharmacological action, central opioid receptors.
As humans express the same types of analgesia-inducing receptors, in this case opioid receptors, as rodents, the FC5-Dalargin construct would be capable of transmigrating the BBB in humans and acting centrally on the opioid receptors of the human brain.
Therefore, FC5-Dalargin conjugate can be used as peripherally-active analgesic for acute or chronic pain indications with improved side-effect profile compared to morphine and other opioid analgesics.
Example 7: Conjugation of FC5 with the analgesic peptide Neuropeptide Y (NPY) The FC5 sdAb prepared in Example 1 was conjugated to a neuropeptide Y (NPY) fragment (NPY-cys), as described below and shown schematically in Figure 14.
5mg of FC5 from Example 1 was placed in a 2-ml micro-centrifuge tube. Sulfo-SMCC
was added to the FC5 in a 7.5x molar ratio; specifically, 436.4u1 of the 2.5mg/ml Sulfo-SMCC was added. The micro-centrifuge tube containing the mixture was then flushed with nitrogen gas and incubated for 1 hour at room temperature (RT). Once the reaction was done, the unreacted Sulfo-SMCC was removed from the maleimide-activated using Pierce 10ml 7K Zeba column. Prior to sample loading column was washed 3 times with 5ml PBS and spun at 1000xg for 2 min. After sample loading, the column was completed with 200 l of PBS and was spun for 2 min at 1000xg.
Separately, and during the above steps, NPY-cysteamide-OH
(YPSKPDNPGEDAPAEDMARYYSALRHYINLITRQRY-cysteamide-OH) was reduced with TCEP. A 5mg/ml stock of NPY-cys was prepared in 4:1:1 milliQ H20:
acetronitile:methanol and flushed with N2. Similarly, a 25mM TCEP solution was prepared in N2-flushed milli-Q H2O. 368 l of the 25mM TCEP solution was then added to 1444 l of 5mg/ml NPY-cys solution to a final concentration of 5mM.
Finally, 18 p1 of 0.5M EDTA was added (a final concentration of 5mM), the solution was then flushed with nitrogen, sealed, vortexed and incubated on ice for 30 min.
The purified maleimide-activated FC5 (2.4 ml) was mixed with the reduced NPY-cys (1.83 ml), flushed with nitrogen, sealed and incubated overnight at 4 C. The next day, the unreacted NPY and the TCEP were removed using Amicon-15 10K column. 10ml PBS and the sample were added to the column and spun at 4000xg for 7 minutes;
volume was reduced to 5m1; the process was repeated 3 times, the final centrifugation was done for 8 min to reduce the sample to 4m1. The conjugated sample was then added to a Pierce 10ml 7K Zeba column prepared as described above, spun for 2 min at 1000xg and collected.
Conjugated samples were then run on a 16% T-SDS-PAGE non-reducing gel and silver stained to confirm shift in molecular weight size after conjugation. Figure 15 shows a photograph of the 16% T-SDS-PAGE of various components and by-products of the reactions. Successful conjugation of FC5 sdAb to NPY-cysteamide (-4.5 kD) is shown.
FC5 alone has molecular weight of 15kD; FC5-NPY conjugates consisted of one NPY
molecule per FC5 (MW - 20kD) and 2NPY molecules per FC5 (MW - 25kD).
Example 8: Analgesic Activity of FC5-NPY in Chronic Pain (Paw flick assay) The Paw Flick test described in Example 6 was used to measure the analgesic activity of the FC5-NPY conjugate of Example 7 in chronic pain.
Chronic inflammatory pain was induced in 5-7 weeks old male Wistar rats, by a intra-plantar (i.pl.) injection (100 pl with a 30-gauge needle) of complete Freund's adjuvant in sterile water in a ratio of 1:1 in the right hind paw under brief isoflurane anesthesia (3%).
Three days after CFA injection the putative antinociceptive effect of different compounds was quantified by measuring latencies of withdrawal of both hind limb paws (ipsilateral and contralateral to CFA injection) in response to radiant heat using digitalized plantar Analgesia Meter for paw stimulation (IITC Model # 336TG Life Science, Inc.). A
rapid paw withdrawal on the side of CFA injection (compared to the contralateral non-injected paw) was indicative of inflammatory pain. During the training period (before experiments), the light-intensity lamp was adjusted to elicit baseline paw withdrawal latencies between 17 to 20 s (in rats). If a withdrawal response did not occur within 20 s, the light beam was automatically turned off and the animal was assigned the maximum score. Results were analyzed as temporal courses of paw withdrawal latency (sec) versus time (min or hrs) and expressed as % of maximum possible effect (%MPE) as described in Example 5.
Intra-cerebroventricular injection: Rats received 5pI intra-cerebroventricular injections of NPY (1 g) as described in Example 6. Results are shown in Figure 16. The maximum possible analgesic effect was achieved within 15 min of icv injection of NPY, lasted for subsequent 15 min and was then `washed-out' to basal levels (no analgesia) over following 90 min.
Intravenous injection: NPY was then injected intravenously in the tail vein in two injections, each containing 2.02 mg/kg of NPY, 1 h apart from each other as described in Example 6. The analgesic effect of NPY was compared to that of FC5-NPY
conjugate injected intravenously in two injections 1 h apart, each containing 5 mg/kg (reflecting the dose of NPY received in control experiment). While NPY did not induce any analgesic effect after intravenous administration (Figure 17), FC5-NPY conjugate demonstrated an analgesic effect reaching 50-60% MPE between 30 min and 1.5 h after injection (Figure 18). These data demonstrate that neuropeptide Y (NPY), a known analgesic when administered centrally (Munglani et al, 1996) is ineffective when administered peripherally because it does not cross the blood-brain barrier. When NPY was conjugated with the blood-brain barrier `carrier' single domain antibody, FC5, the conjugate became efficacious in inducing analgesia in chronic pain model because FC5 enabled NPY delivery across the blood brain barrier to the sites of its pharmacological action, central NPY receptors (Balasubramaniam, 1997).
Humans express the same types of analgesia-inducing receptors as rodents;
thus, the FC5-NPY construct would be capable of transmigrating the BBB in humans and acting centrally on the NPY receptors of the human brain. Therefore, FC5-NPY
conjugate can be used as peripherally-acting non-opioid analgesic for the treatment of chronic pain.
Advantageously, this construct does not have typical side-effects of opioid drugs such as morphine.
NPY acts on several types of receptors, of which Y1 receptors are responsible for measured analgesic effect. In addition, NPY has shown anti-epileptogenic effect through Y2 receptors. Antiepileptiform effects of NPY have been demonstrated in hippocampal slice models. Overexpression of NPY in rats renders them resistant to the development of induced seizures (Woldbye et al, 1997; Vezzani et al, 2004). Finally, exogenous NPY
application - in vivo via an indwelling cannula or in vitro superfused on acute hippocampal slices - powerfully suppresses various forms of epileptiform activity (Woldbye et al, 1997; Baraban, 2004). This points to anti-epileptic potential of NPYergic agonists in the treatment of complex partial seizures in humans. In the central nervous system, and specifically in hippocampus (an epileptogenic brain region where limbic seizures originate), expression of Y1, Y2 and Y5 are most prominent. Both Y2 and Y5 receptors have been implicated as important `targets' for developing specific agonists for anti-seizure drugs (Woldbye et al, 1997; Redrobe et al, 1999; Baraban, 2004).
Thus, by virtue of NPY-FC5 being delivered to the brain after systemic injection, as demonstrated by the analgesic effect demonstrated herein, NPY-FC5 could also have other beneficial therapeutic effects mediated via Y receptors, such as treatment for refractory temporal lobe epilepsy, where standard treatments have failed due to developed drug resistance. Similarly, other anti-epiletogenic peptides, such as but not limited to galanin or cortistatin can be delivered across the blood-brain barrier via conjugation to FC5, for action in the brain.
The embodiments and examples described herein are illustrative and are not meant to limit the scope of the invention as claimed. Variations of the foregoing embodiments, including alternatives, modifications and equivalents, are intended by the inventors to be encompassed by the claims. Furthermore, the discussed combination of features might not be necessary for the inventive solution.
LIST OF SEQUENCES:
GAGGTCCAGCTGCAGGCGTCTGGAGGAGGATTGGTGCAGGCTGGGGGCTCTCTG
AGACTCTCCTGTGCAGCCTCTGGATTCAAAATCACTCACTATACCATGGGCTGGTT
CCGCCAGGCTCCAGGGAAGGAGCGTGAATTTGTATCACGTATTACTTGGGGTGGT
GATAACACCTTCTATTCAAACTCCGTGAAGGGCCGATTCACCATTTCCAGAGACAAC
GCCAAGAACACGGTCTATCTGCAAATGAACAGCCTGAAACCTGAGGACACGGCCG
ATTATTACTGTGCAGCAGGTTCGACGTCGACTGCGACGCCACTTAGGGTGGACTAC
TGGGGCAAAGGGACCCAGGTCACCGTCTCCTCA (SEQ ID NO:10) EVQLQASGGGLVQAGGSLRLSCAASGFKITHYTMGW FRQAPGKEREFVSRITWGGDN
TFYSNSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTVYLQM NSLKPEDTADYYCAAGSTSTATPLRVDYWGKG
TQVTVSS (SEQ ID NO:4) TMEM30A isoform I
MAMNYNAKDEVDGGPPCAPGGTAKTRRPDNTAFKQQRLPAWQPILTAGTVLPIFFIIGL
IFIPIGIGIFVTSNNIREIEIDYTGTEPSSPCNKCLSPDVTPCFCTINFTLEKSFEGNVFMYY
GLSNFYQNHRRYVKSRDDSQLNGDSSALLNPSKECEPYRRNEDKPIAPCGAIANSMFN
DTLELFLIGNDSYPIPIALKKKGIAWWTDKNVKFRNPPGGDNLEERFKGTTKPVNWLKP
VYMLDSDPDNNGFINEDFIVWMRTAALPTFRKLYRLIERKSDLHPTLPAGRYSLNVTYN
YPVHYFDGRKRMILSTISWMGGKNPFLGIAYIAVGSISFLLGWLLVINHKYRNSSNTADI
TI (SEQ ID NO:11) TMEM30A isoform 2 MAMNYNAKDEVDGGPPCAPGGTAKTRRPDNTAFKQQRLPAWQPILTAGTVLPIFFIIGL
IFIPIGIGIFVTSNNIREIEGNVFMYYGLSNFYQNHRRYVKSRDDSQLNGDSSALLNPSKE
CEPYRRNEDKPIAPCGAIANSMFNDTLELFLIGNDSYPIPIALKKKGIAWWTDKNVKFRN
PPGGDNLEERFKGTTKPVNWLKPVYMLDSDPDNNGFINEDFIVWMRTAALPTFRKLYR
LIERKSDLHPTLPAGRYSLNVTYNYPVHYFDGRKRMILSTISWMGGKNPFLGIAYIAVGSI
SFLLGWLLVINHKYRNSSNTADITI (SEQ ID NO:12) TMEM30A isoform 3 MYYGLSNFYQNHRRYVKSRDDSQLNGDSSALLNPSKECEPYRRNEDKPIAPCGAIANS
MFNDTLELFLIGNDSYPIPIALKKKGIAWWTDKNVKFRNPPGGDNLEERFKGTTKPVNW
LKPVYMLDSDPDNNGFINEDFIVWMRTAALPTFRKLYRLIERKSDLHPTLPAGRYSLNVT
YNYPVHYFDGRKRMILSTISWMGGKNPFLGIAYIAVGSISFLLGWLLVINHKYRNSSNT
ADITI (SEQ ID NO:13) TMEM30A extracellular domain GIFVTSNNIREIEIDYTGTEPSSPCNKCLSPDVTPCFCTINFTLEKSFEGNVFMYYGLSNF
YQNHRRYVKSRDDSQLNGDSSALLNPSKECEPYRRNEDKPIAPCGAIANSMFNDTLEL
FLIGNDSYPIPIALKKKGIAWWTDKNVKFRNPPGGDNLEERFKGTTKPVNWLKPVYMLD
SDPDNNGFINEDFIVWMRTAALPTFRKLYRLIERKSDLHPTLPAGRYSLNVTYNYPVHYF
DGRKRMILSTISWMGGKNP (SEQ ID NO:14) REFERENCES
All patents, patent applications and publications referred to herein and throughout the application are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Balasubramaniam AA. (1997) Neuropeptide Y family of hormones: receptor subtypes and antagonists. Peptides. 18(3):445-57.
Baraban SC: Neuropeptide Y and epilepsy: recent progress, prospects and controversies. Neuropeptides 38:261-265, 2004 Bickel, U., Yoshikawa, T., & Pardridge, W.M. Delivery of peptides and proteins through the blood-brain barrier. Adv. Drug Deliv. Rev. 46, 247-279 (2001).
Demeule M, Currie JC, Bertrand Y, Che C, Nguyen T, Regina A, Gabathuler R, Castaigne JP, Beliveau R. Involvement of the low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein in the transcytosis of the brain delivery vector angiopep-2. J
Neurochem.
106(4):1534-44. (2008) Eisenberg et al. Analysis of membrance and surface protein sequences with the hydrophobic moment plot. J. Mol. Biol., 179, 125-142.
Garberg P, Ball M, Borg N, Cecchelli R, Fenart L, Hurst RD, Lindmark T, Mabondzo A, Nilsson JE, Raub TJ, Stanimirovic D, Terasaki T, Oberg JO, Osterberg T. In vitro models for the blood-brain barrier. Toxicol In Vitro. 19(3):299-334 (2005).
Hamers-Casterman, C. et al. Naturally occurring antibodies devoid of light chains.
Nature 363, 446-448 (1993).
Herve F, Ghinea N, Scherrmann JM. CNS delivery via adsorptive transcytosis.
AAPS
J.10(3):455-72. (2008) Jespers, L., Schon, 0., Famm, K. & Winter, G. Aggregation-resistant domain antibodies selected on phage by heat denaturation. Nat Biotechnol 22, 1161-1165 (2004).
Jones AR, Shusta EV. Blood-brain barrier transport of therapeutics via receptor-mediation. Pharm Res. 24(9):1759-71 (2007) Kabat EA, Wu TT. Identical V region amino acid sequences and segments of sequences in antibodies of different specificities. Relative contributions of VH and VL
genes, minigenes, and complementarity-determining regions to binding of antibody-combining sites. J Immunol. 1991;147:1709-19.
Kabat, E. A., Wu, T. T., Perry, H. M, Gottesman, K. S., and Koeler, C. (ed.) (1991) Sequences of Proteins of Immunological Interest. US Department of Health and Human Services, US Public Health Service, Bethesda, MD.
Munglani R, Hudspith MJ, Hunt SP (1996) The therapeutic potential of neuropeptide Y.
Analgesic, anxiolytic and anti hypertensive. Drugs. 52(3):371-89.
Murriel CL, Dowdy SF. Influence of protein transduction domains on intracellular delivery of macromolecules. Expert Opin Drug Deliv. 3(6):739-46.(2006) Muruganandam A, Tanha J, Narang S, Stanimirovic D. Selection of phage-displayed llama single-domain antibodies that transmigrate across human blood-brain barrier endothelium. FASEB J. 16(2):240-2. (2002) Niederberger E, Kuhlein H, Geisslinger G. Update on the pathobiology of neuropathic pain. Expert Rev Proteomics. 5(6):799-818 (2008) Nuttall, S.D. et al. Isolation and characterization of an IgNAR variable domain specific for the human mitochondrial translocase receptor Tom70. European journal of biochemistry / FEBS 270, 3543-3554 (2003).
Padlan, E.A. Anatomy of the antibody molecule. Molecular immunology 31, 169-(1994).
Pardridge, W.M. Drug and gene delivery to the brain: The vascular route.
Neuron 36:555-558 (2002).
Pardridge, W.M., Buciak, J.L., & Friden, P.M. Selective transport of an anti-transferrin receptor antibody through the blood-brain barrier in vivo. J. Pharmacol. Exp.
Ther. 259, 66-70 (1991).
Pencheva N, Pospisek J, Hauzerova L, Barth T, Milanov P. Activity profiles of dalargin and its analogues in mu-, delta- and kappa-opioid receptor selective bioassays. Br J
Pharmacol. 128(3):569-76 (1999).
Polt R, Dhanasekaran M, Keyari CM. Glycosylated neuropeptides: a new vista for neuropsychopharmacology? Med Res Rev. 25(5):557-85 (2005).
Redrobe JP, Dumont Y, St-Pierre J-A, Quirion R: Multiple receptors for neuropeptide Y
in the hippocampus: putative roles in seizures and cognition Brain Research 848:153-166, 1999 Rousselle C, Clair P, Smirnova M, Kolesnikov Y, Pasternak GW, Gac-Breton S, Rees AR, Scherrmann JM, Temsamani J. Improved brain uptake and pharmacological activity of dalargin using a peptide-vector-mediated strategy. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 306(1):371-6 (2003).
Smith HS. Peripherally-acting opioids. Pain Physician. 11(2 Suppl):S121-32.
(2008) To, R. et al. Isolation of monomeric human V(H)s by a phage selection. J Biol Chem 280, 41395-41403 (2005).
Trescot AM, Datta S, Lee M, Hansen H. Opioid pharmacology. Pain Physician.
11(2 Su ppl ): S 133-53 (2008) Vezzani A, Sperk G: Overexpression of NPY and Y2 receptors in epileptic brain tissue:
an endogenous neuroprotective mechanism in temporal lobe epilepsy?
Neuropeptides 38:245-252,2004.
Weber, S. J., Greene, D. L., Sharma, S. D., Yamamura, H. I., Kramer, T. H., Burks, T.
F., Hruby, J. H., Hersh, L. B. and Davis, T. P.: Distribution and antinociception of [3H]cyclic [D-Pent, D-Pen5]enkephalin and two halogenated analogs after intravenous administration. J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 259: 1109-1117, 1991 Woldbye DP, Larsen PJ, Mikkelsen JD, Klemp K, Madsen TM, Bolwig TG. Powerful inhibition of kainic acid seizures by neuropeptide Y via Y5-like receptors.
Nat Med.
3(7):761-4, 1997 Woldbye DPD: Antiepileptic effects of NPY on pentylenetetrazole seizures.
Regulatory Peptides 75-76:279-282, 1998 Xapelli S, Agasse F, Ferreira R, Silva AP, Malva JO.: Neuropeptide Y as an endogenous antiepileptic, neuroprotective and pro-neurogenic peptide. Recent Pat CNS Drug Discov.;1(3):315-24, 2006
The present invention also provides a composition comprising the compound described above and a pharmaceutically acceptable diluent, carrier, or excipient.
Formulation(s) based on the presently described invention may be developed into clinically used analgesics for the treatment of pain, including, but not limited to pain associated with arthritis, particularly osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis, post-operative pain, cancer-related pain, HIV-related pain, neuropathic pain syndromes, etc.
The advantage of compounds of the present invention over other commercially available opioids is higher selectivity to delta class of opioid receptors in the brain, which renders them less likely to cause dependency.
The present invention also provides a method of treating pain comprising administering a compound comprising an antibody or fragment thereof capable of transmigrating across the blood brain barrier (BBB) and an analgesic peptide. The compound may be as described above. In the method as described, the pain may be associated with arthritis, post-operative pain, cancer-related pain, HIV-related pain, or neuropathic pain syndromes.
The present invention further provides a method of preventing or treating epileptic seizures comprising administering a compound or a composition as described herein, wherein the analgesic peptide also has anti-epiletogenic activity. In a non-limiting example, the analgesic peptide may be NPY or a fragment thereof, galanin, or cortistatin.
The Examples herein show that the conjugate of the hexapeptide Ieu-encephalin analog Dalargin with the blood-brain barrier-permeable single domain antibody FC5 is analgesic after systemic administration. It is further demonstrated that this conjugate has anti-nociceptive (analgesic) activity when injected both intra-cerebroventricularly and systemically. Similarly, the examples show that conjugation of a 36aa fragment of neuropeptide Y, which retains the neuropeptide Y receptor binding sites of the original 97 as peptide, to FC5 also leads to analgesic activity after systemic administration.
Analysis of nociception and analgesia was performed in mice using tail-flick test (model of acute pain) and in rats using paw-flick test (Hargreaves model of chronic pain). The data supports the usefulness of the blood-brain barrier-transmigrating sdAb FC5 in improving the systemic availability and efficacy of CNS-acting peptides.
Additional aspects and advantages of the present invention will be apparent in view of the following description. The detailed description and examples, while indicating preferred embodiments of the invention, are given by way of illustration only, as various changes and modifications within the scope of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art in light of the teachings of this invention.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
These and other features of the invention will now be described by way of example, with reference to the appended drawings, wherein:
FIGURE 1 shows the scheme for chemical synthesis of FC5-Dalargin. FC5 was first conjugated to the NHS group of Sulfo-SMCC cross-linker (1); then maleimide-activated FC5-sulfo-SMCC was conjugated to reduced Dalargin-cysteine (2).
FIGURE 2 is a photograph of a 16% tricine gel electrophoresis of various component and by-products of the reactions described in Figure 1. Lane 1 - 2 pg FC5;
Lane 2- 2 fag FC5; Lane 3 - 2 pg FC5-SMCC-Dalargin (FC5-Dal); Lane 4 - 2 pg FC5; Lane 5 - 2 pg FC5-SMCC; Lane 6 - 2 fag FC5; Lane 7 - 2 tag FC5-Cy5.5; Lane 8 - 2 pg FC5. FC5 alone has molecular weight of 14kD; FC5-Dalargin showed molecular weight of 15 kDa.
FC5 conjugate with Cy5.5 (1kD) was used as a control (MW FC5-Cy5.5 = 15 kD) FIGURE 3 is a bar graph summarizing the results of transmigration of FC5 and Dalargin across in vitro model of the blood-brain barrier composed of immortalized rat brain endothelial cells and immortalized rat astrocyte-conditioned media.
FIGURE 4 shows the results of receptor binding competition assays of Dalargin and Dalargin derivatives (Dalargin-cys and Dalargin-FC5) against 30nM 3H-DAMGO in isolated rat brain membranes.
FIGURE 5 shows the latency time in tail-flick assay induced by escalating doses of morphine - determination of maximal analgesic effect. The morphine dose response was determined by injecting 3 mg/kg or 10 mg/kg of morphine subcutaneously and determining the latency of tail flick at different time points. The maximal response - 10 sec latency (cut-off time) was induced by 10 mg/kg morphine 30 min after s.c.
injection.
FIGURE 6 shows a summary of the analgesic effects of Dalargin, Dalargin-cys and Dalargin-FC5 administered intra-cerebroventricularly measured by the tail-flick assay.
FIGURE 7 shows the analgesic activity of Dalargin and FC5-Dalargin (dosage:
0.86 mg/kg Dalargin) after intra-carotid (systemic) injection in the tail-flick pain model in mice.
FIGURE 8 shows the analgesic activity of Dalargin and FC5-Dalargin (1.72 mg/kg of Dalargin) after intra-carotid (systemic) injection in the tail-flick pain model in mice.
FIGURE 9 shows the analgesic effect of 10 mg/kg morphine (administered subcutaneously) in the paw flick assay (chronic pain model).
FIGURE 10 shows the analgesic effects of Dalargin-cys at two different doses (1.08 pg and 10.8 pg) after intra-cerebroventricular injection in paw flick assay (chronic pain model).
FIGURE 11 shows the analgesic effects FC5-Dalargin (74.4 g) after intra-cerebroventricular injection in the paw flick assay (chronic pain model).
FIGURE 12 shows the analgesic effects of FC5-Dalargin after intravenous injection. The maximal analgesic effect of FC5-Dalargin was reached after 3 injections; a lack of analgesic effect for Dalargin-cys (administered intravenously) in 3 injections was observed.
FIGURE 13 shows a lack of analgesic effects of the EG2-Dalargin conjugate and of FC5 after intravenous injections (3 injections).
FIGURE 14 shows the scheme for chemical synthesis of FC5-neuropeptide Y (NPY).
FC5 was first conjugated to the NHS group of Sulfo-SMCC cross-linker (1); then maleimide-activated FC5 (FC5-smcc) was conjugated to reduced NPY-cysteamide (2).
FIGURE 15 is a photograph of 16% T-SDS-PAGE, non-reducing silver-stained gel of various components and by-products of reactions described in Figure 14. Lane #1 -molecular weigth marker; Lane #2 - 500 ng FC5; Lane #3 - 500 ng FC5-SMCC; Lane #4 - 500ng FC5-SMCC-NPY before purification; Lane #5 - 500ng Fc5-SMCC-NPY
after purification; Lane #6 - 500ng FC5; Lane #7 - 500ng NPY-cys.
FIGURE 16 shows the analgesic effects FC5-NPY (1 g) after intra-cerebroventricular injection in the paw flick assay (chronic pain model).
FIGURE 17 shows a lack of analgesic effect of NPY after two intravenous injections of 2.02 mg/kg NPY (C-term cysteamide) in each, at Oh and at 1h in paw-flick assay (chronic pain model).
FIGURE 18 shows the analgesic effect of the FC5-NPY conjugate after intravenous injections (two injections (5 mg/kg of FC5-NPY in each injection), one at Oh, one at 1 h) in paw-flick assay (chronic pain model).
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to compositions and methods for brain delivery of analgesic drugs. More specifically, the present invention relates to non-invasive brain delivery technology for centrally-acting analgesic peptides.
The present invention provides a compound for central delivery of peptides comprising an antibody or fragment thereof capable of transmigrating across the blood brain barrier (BBB) and an analgesic peptide.
The term "antibody", also referred to in the art as "immunoglobulin" (Ig), used herein refers to a protein constructed from paired heavy and light polypeptide chains; various Ig isotypes exist, including IgA, IgD, IgE, IgG, and IgM. When an antibody is correctly folded, each chain folds into a number of distinct globular domains joined by more linear polypeptide sequences. For example, the immunoglobulin light chain folds into a variable NO and a constant (CO domain, while the heavy chain folds into a variable NO
and three constant (CH, CH2, CH3) domains. Interaction of the heavy and light chain variable domains (VH and VL) results in the formation of an antigen binding region (Fv).
Each domain has a well-established structure familiar to those of skill in the art.
The light and heavy chain variable regions are responsible for binding the target antigen and can therefore show significant sequence diversity between antibodies. The constant regions show less sequence diversity, and are responsible for binding a number of natural proteins to elicit important biochemical events. The variable region of an antibody contains the antigen binding determinants of the molecule, and thus determines the specificity of an antibody for its target antigen. The majority of sequence variability occurs in six hypervariable regions, three each per variable heavy and light chain; the hypervariable regions combine to form the antigen-binding site, and contribute to binding and recognition of an antigenic determinant. The specificity and affinity of an antibody for its antigen is determined by the structure of the hypervariable regions, as well as their size, shape and chemistry of the surface they present to the antigen. Various schemes exist for identification of the regions of hypervariability, the two most common being those of Kabat and of Chothia and Lesk. Kabat et al (1991) define the "complementarity-determining regions" (CDR) based on sequence variability at the antigen-binding regions of the VH and VL domains. Chothia and Lesk (1987) define the "hypervariable loops" (H or L) based on the location of the structural loop regions in the VH and VL domains; the numbering for the hypervariable loops is defined as H1:
27-35;
H2: 52-56; and H3: 95-102 (equivalent to CDR3 of Kabat numbering) for VHNHH
domains (Chothia and Lesk, 1997). As these individual schemes define CDR and hypervariable loop regions that are adjacent or overlapping, those of skill in the antibody art often utilize the terms "CDR" and "hypervariable loop" interchangeably, and they may be so used herein. The CDR amino acids in VH and VL regions are defined herein according to the Kabat numbering system (Kabat et al. 1991).
The region outside of the CDR is referred to as the framework region (FR). The FRs provide structural integrity to the variable domain and ensure retention of the immunoglobulin fold. This characteristic structure of antibodies provides a stable scaffold upon which substantial antigen-binding diversity can be explored by the immune system to obtain specificity for a broad array of antigens (Padlan et al, 1994).
An "antibody fragment" as referred to herein may include any suitable antigen-binding antibody fragment known in the art. The antibody fragment may be obtained by manipulation of a naturally-occurring antibody, or may be obtained using recombinant methods. For example, an antibody fragment may include, but is not limited to Fv, single-chain Fv (scFV; a molecule comprising VL and VH connected with a peptide linker), Fab, Fab', F(ab')2, single domain antibody (sdAb), and multivalent presentations of these.
In a non-limiting example, the antibody fragment may be a single domain antibody (sdAb) derived from naturally-occurring sources. Heavy chain antibodies of camelid origin (Hamers-Casterman et al, 1993) lack light chains and thus their antigen binding sites consist of one domain, termed VHH. sdAb have also been observed in shark and are termed VNAR (Nuttall et al, 2003); other sdAb may be engineered based on human heavy chain sequences (Jespers et al, 2004; To et al, 2005). As used herein, "sdAb"
includes those directly isolated from VL, VH, VHH or VNAR reservoir of any origin through phage display or other display technologies and those generated through further modification of such sdAb by humanization, affinity maturation, stabilization, solubilisation (e.g., camelization), or other methods of antibody engineering.
Also encompassed byt the present invention are homologues, derivatives, or fragments that retain the antigen-binding function and specificity of the sdAb.
A person of skill in the art would be well-acquainted with the structure of a single-domain antibody (see, for example, 3DWT, 2P42 in Protein Data Bank). An sdAb comprises a single immunoglobulin domain that retains the immuglobulin fold; most notably, only three CDR form the antigen-binding site. However, and as would be understood by those of skill in the art, not all CDR may be required for binding the antigen. For example, and without wishing to be limiting, one, two, or three of the CDR may contribute to binding and recognition of the antigen by the sdAb. The CDR of the sdAb are referred to herein as CDR1, CDR2, and CDR3, and are numbered based on Kabat numbering (Kabat et al. 1991).
By "capable of transmigrating across the BBB", it is meant that the antibody or fragment thereof crosses the blood-brain barrier; such antibodies or fragments may be used to carry other molecules, such as therapeutics, for delivery to the brain tissue.
The antibody or fragment thereof may be any suitable antibody or fragment thereof known in the art to transmigrate the BBB.
In one example, the antibody or fragment thereof may bind to transmembrane protein 30A (TMEM30A), or isoforms, variants, portions, or fragments thereof. Without wishing to be limiting in any manner, TMEM30A may be an isoform or as shown in SEQ ID
NOs:
11-13 or an extracellular fragments as shown in SEQ ID NO:14 (as described by WO
2007/036021), or sequences substantially identical thereto.
The antibody or fragment thereof may comprise a complementarity determining region (CDR) 1 sequence of HYTMG (SEQ ID NO:1); a CDR2 sequence of RITWGGDNTFYSNSVKG (SEQ ID NO:2); and a CDR3 sequence of GSTSTATPLRVDY
(SEQ ID NO:3).
The terms "antibody" and "antibody fragment" ("fragment thereof") are as defined above.
As previously stated, the antibody or fragment thereof may be a sdAb. The sdAb may be of camelid origin, and thus may be based on camelid framework regions;
alternatively, the CDR may be grafted onto other antibody domains, for example but not limited to VNAR or human VH or VL framework regions. In yet another alternative, the CDR described above may be grafted onto the framework regions of other types of antibody fragments (Fv, scFv, Fab). The present embodiment further encompasses an antibody fragment that is "humanized" using any suitable method know in the art, for example, but not limited to CDR grafting and veneering. Humanization of an antibody or antibody fragment comprises replacing an amino acid in the sequence with its human counterpart, as found in the human consensus sequence, without loss of antigen-binding ability or specificity; this approach reduces immunogenicity of the antibody or fragment thereof when introduced into human subjects. In the process of CDR grafting, one or more than one of the heavy chain CDR defined herein may be fused or grafted to a human variable region (VH, or VL), or to other human antibody fragment framework regions (Fv, scFv, Fab). In such a case, the conformation of said one or more than one hypervariable loop is preserved, as is the affinity and specificity for its target (i.e., TMEM30A). CDR grafting is known in the art and is described in at least the following:
US Patent No. 6180370, US Patent No. 5693761, US Patent No. 6054297, US Patent No. 5859205, and European Patent No. 626390. Veneering, also referred to in the art as "variable region resurfacing", involves humanizing solvent-exposed positions of the antibody or fragment; thus, buried non-humanized residues, which may be important for CDR conformation, are preserved while the potential for immunological reaction against solvent-exposed regions is minimized. Veneering is known in the art and is described in at least the following: US Patent No. 5869619, US Patent No. 5766886, US
Patent No.
5821123, and European Patent No. 519596. Persons of skill in the art would be amply familiar with methods of preparing such humanized antibody fragments.
Without wishing to be limiting in any manner, the antibody or fragment thereof may comprise the FC5 sdAb described by Muruganandam et aI, in WO 2002/057445. In a specific, non-limiting example, the antibody or fragment thereof may comprise the sequence EVQLQASGGGLVQAGGSLRLSCAASGFKITHYTMGWFRQAPGKEREFVSRITWGGDN
TFYSNSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTVYLQMNSLKPEDTADYYCAAGSTSTATPLRVDYWGKG
TQVTVSS (SEQ ID NO:4), or a sequence substantially identical thereto.
A substantially identical sequence may comprise one or more conservative amino acid mutations. It is known in the art that one or more conservative amino acid mutations to a reference sequence may yield a mutant peptide with no substantial change in physiological, chemical, or functional properties compared to the reference sequence; in such a case, the reference and mutant sequences would be considered "substantially identical" polypeptides. Conservative amino acid mutation may include addition, deletion, or substitution of an amino acid; in a non-limiting example, the conservative amino acid mutation is a conservative amino acid substitution. A conservative amino acid substitution is defined herein as the substitution of an amino acid residue for another amino acid residue with similar chemical properties (e.g. size, charge, or polarity).
A conservative amino acid substitution may substitute a basic, neutral, hydrophobic, or acidic amino acid for another of the same group. By the term "basic amino acid" it is meant hydrophilic amino acids having a side chain pK value of greater than 7, which are typically positively charged at physiological pH. Basic amino acids include histidine (His or H), arginine (Arg or R), and lysine (Lys or K). By the term "neutral amino acid" (also "polar amino acid"), it is meant hydrophilic amino acids having a side chain that is uncharged at physiological pH, but which has at least one bond in which the pair of electrons shared in common by two atoms is held more closely by one of the atoms.
Polar amino acids include serine (Ser or S), threonine (Thr or T), cysteine (Cys or C), tyrosine (Tyr or Y), asparagine (Asn or N), and glutamine (Gin or Q). The term "hydrophobic amino acid" (also "non-polar amino acid") is meant to include amino acids exhibiting a hydrophobicity of greater than zero according to the normalized consensus hydrophobicity scale of Eisenberg (1984). Hydrophobic amino acids include proline (Pro or P), isoleucine (Ile or I), phenylalanine (Phe or F), valine (Val or V), leucine (Leu or L), tryptophan (Trp or W), methionine (Met or M), alanine (Ala or A), and glycine (Gly or G).
"Acidic amino acid" refers to hydrophilic amino acids having a side chain pK
value of less than 7, which are typically negatively charged at physiological pH.
Acidic amino acids include glutamate (Glu or E), and aspartate (Asp or D).
Sequence identity is used to evaluate the similarity of two sequences; it is determined by calculating the percent of residues that are the same when the two sequences are aligned for maximum correspondence between residue positions. Any known method may be used to calculate sequence identity; for example, computer software is available to calculate sequence identity. Without wishing to be limiting, sequence identity can be calculated by software such as NCBI BLAST2 service maintained by the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics (and as found at http://ca.expasy.org/tools/blast/), BLAST-P, Blast-N, or FASTA-N, or any other appropriate software that is known in the art.
The substantially identical sequences ("substantially identical thereto") of the present invention may be at least 80% identical; in another example, the substantially identical sequences may be at least 80, 85, 90, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, or 100% identical at the amino acid level to sequences described herein. Importantly, the substantially identical sequences retain the activity and specificity of the reference sequence. As would be known to one of skill in the art, certain amino acid residues within the framework regions of an antibody may be mutated (substituted or deleted) without affecting the functional properties of the antibody (antigen recognition and binding).
The compound of the present invention provides the antibody or fragment thereof linked to an analgesic peptide.
By the term "analgesic peptide", it is meant a protein sequence that exhibits an analgesic effect. The analgesic peptide may act on opioid receptors (such as p receptors, delta (6) receptors, kappa (K) receptors, sigma (6) receptors), neuropeptide Y receptors (such as Y1-Y6), neurotensin receptors (such as NTS1 and NTS2), galanin receptors (such as GaIR1 and GaIR2), orexin A and B receptors (such as OX1 and OX2), cortistatin receptors (such as SST1 to 5), or any combination thereof. The analgesic peptides may be endogenous peptides (such as endorphins, enkephalins and dynorphins, galanin, neurotensin, neuropeptide Y, somatostatin, orexin A and B), exogenous peptides (such as conotoxin-derived peptides, analgesic peptides purified from venoms of scorpion, cone shells (such as conotoxins, ziconotide), tarantula, or other species), or mutants or analogues thereof. In a non-specific, non-limiting example, the analgesic peptide may be selected from Dalargin, neuropeptide Y, and neurotensin.
By the term "linked", also referred to herein as "conjugated", it is meant that the antibody or fragment thereof is linked directly or indirectly (e.g., via a linker), covalently or non-covalently (e.g., adsorption, ionic interaction) to the analgesic peptide. A
covalent linkage may be achieved through a chemical cross-linking reaction, through fusion using recombinant DNA methodology combined with any peptide expression system, such as bacteria, yeast or mammalian cell-based systems, or a combination thereof.
Methods for linking the analgesic peptide to the antibody or fragment thereof would be well known to a person of skill in the art.
For example, and without wishing to be limiting in any manner, the present invention provides a compound comprising the FC5 sdAb linked to the enkephalin analogue Dalargin (Tyr-[D-Ala]-Gly-Phe-Leu-Arg; SEQ ID NO:5). The Dalargin peptide, which has D-Ala in second position in order to prevent enzymatic destruction, is used as a therapy for peripheral ulcers, and from this application it is known that Dalargin is stable in the blood stream (Weber et al, 1991). Independent of its anti-ulcer activity, Dalargin exhibits potent analgesic activity following intra-ventricular injection into the brain (Polt et al, 2005). However, it does not produce analgesia when given peripherally (Weber et al, 1991). From this it can be concluded that Dalargin, when administered into the blood stream, does not penetrate through the BBB in sufficient amounts to cause central nervous system (CNS) action. Dalargin has analgesic effect only after direct injection into the brain (Smith, 2008; Polt et al, 2005).
Another non-limiting example provides a compound comprising the FC5 sdAb linked to neuropeptide Y (NPY), which comprises the sequence:
MLGNKRLGLSGLTLALSLLVCLGALAEAYPSKPDNPGEDAPAEDMARYYSALRHYINLI
TRQRYGKRSSPETLISDLLMRESTENVPRTRLEDPAMW (SEQ ID NO:6), or to a fragment thereof. The fragment may be any fragment that is effective as an analgesic peptide, and that retains at least one of the neuropeptide Y
receptor binding sites of the original peptide; for example, the fragment of NPY may comprise, but is not limited to YPSKPDNPGEDAPAEDMARYYSALRHYINLITRQRY (SEQ ID NO:7).
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is the most abundant peptide in the human CNS, preferentially expressed in GABA-ergic interneurons and is a potent presynaptic inhibitor of glutamate-mediated synaptic actions. The peptide has various physiological functions mediated by several receptor types, Y1-Y6, which all belong to the G-protein coupled receptor superfamily. It is also important in cardiovascular physiology, feeding, anxiety and depression. NPY has analgesic effect through actions on Y1 receptors expressed in the dorsal horn, and anti-epileptogenic effect through action on Y2 receptors expressed in the hippocampus. NPYergic system may be a good target for the treatment of pharmaco-resistant forms of temporal lobe epilepsy, by acting on hyperexcitability, neuronal death or brain repair (Xapelli et al., 2006). In order to achieve new NPY-based analgesic and antiepileptic strategies, NPY needs to be able to reach its targets in the brain. This is currently possible only by direct intra-cerebroventricular injection of the peptide, because systemically injected peptide does not cross the blood-brain barrier (Woldbye, 1998).
Dalargin, or NPY or fragment thereof may be linked or conjugated to the FC5 via any method described above and known in the art. For example, and without wishing to be limiting in any manner, a cysteamide-OH residue may be placed at the N- or C-terminal of the peptide (using recombinant methods, during peptide synthesis, or by other methods) and the resulting peptide may be conjugated to the antibody or fragment thereof (which may be provided with a Sulfo-SMCC cross-linker) using chemistries known in the art, such as that shown in Figure 1 and/or 14.
The conjugation of the two molecules renders them pharmacologically effective after systemic injection, as shown in the present Examples. Specifically, both the Dalargin-FC5 and NPY-FC5 conjugates were shown to have analgesic effects after systemic administration, indicating their transmigration across the BBB and action on central receptors. The Dalargin-FC5 formulation acts on both 6 and p central opioid receptors, in contrast to other centrally-acting opioids that bind selectively p receptors.
Because of this mechanism of action, the Dalargin-FC5 formulation is less likely to cause addiction and other side effects mediated through p receptors. NPY-FC5 acts on several types of receptors, of which Y1 are responsible for measured analgesic effect. In addition, and by virtue of NPY-FC5 being delivered to the brain after systemic injection, as demonstrated by analgesic effect, NPY-FC5 could have other beneficial therapeutic effects mediated via other receptors, most notably anti-epileptogenic effect through Y2 receptors.
The present invention also provides compositions or formulations comprising the compounds described herein. The compositions or formulations may further comprise pharmaceutically acceptable diluents, carriers, or excipients. By the term "pharmaceutically acceptable", it is meant that the diluent, carrier, or excipient is compatible with the compound of the present invention, and is not deleterious to the recipient of the composition. The diluent, carrier, or excipient may be any suitable diluent, carrier, or excipient known in the art, and may vary based on the route of administration and dosage required.
The compounds and formulations of the presently described invention may be developed into clinically used analgesics for the treatment of pain, including, but not limited to pain associated with arthritis, particularly osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis, post-operative pain, cancer-related pain, HIV-related pain, neuropathic pain syndromes, etc. The advantage of compounds of the present invention over other commercially available opioids is their decreased likeliness to cause dependency.
The present invention further provides a method of treating pain comprising administering a compound or a composition as described herein. The method as described may be used for the treatment of pain, including, but not limited to pain associated with arthritis, particularly osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis, post-operative pain, cancer-related pain, HIV-related pain, neuropathic pain syndromes, or other types of pain.
The present invention will be further illustrated in the following examples.
However, it is to be understood that these examples are for illustrative purposes only and should not be used to limit the scope of the present invention in any manner.
Example 1: FC5 sdAb cloning, expression and purification FC5 single domain antibody (sdAb) was cloned, expressed and purified in preparation for conjugation to analgesic peptides. FC5 was expressed in fusion with His5 and c-myc tags) to allow for purification by immobilized metal affinity chromatography using HiTrap ChelatingTM column and for detection by immunochemistry, respectively.
Briefly, DNA encoding sdAb FC5 (SEQ ID NO:12) was cloned into the Bbsl/BamHI
sites of plasmid pSJF2 to generate expression vector for FC5 (Muruganandam et al, 2002).
The DNA constructs were confirmed by nucleotide sequencing on 373A DNA
Sequencer Stretch (PE Applied Biosystems) using primers fdTGIII, 5'-GTGAAAAAATTATTATTATTCGCAATTCCT-3' (SEQ ID NO:8) and 96GIII, 5'-CCCTCATAGTTAGCGTAACG-3' (SEQ ID NO:9).
Single clones of recombinant antibody-expressing bacteria E. coli strain TG1 were used to inoculate 100 ml of M9 medium containing 100 fag/ml of ampicillin, and the culture was shaken overnight at 200 rpm at 37 C. The grown cells (25 ml) were transferred into 1 L
of M9 medium (0.2% glucose, 0.6% Na2HPO4, 0.3% KH2PO4, 0.1 % NH4CI, 0.05%
NaCl, 1 mM MgCI2, 0.1 mM CaCl2) supplemented with 5 pg/ml of vitamin B1, 0.4%
casamino acid, and 100 pg/ml of ampicillin. The cell culture was shaken at room temperature for 24 hours at 200 rpm and subsequently supplemented with 100 ml of 1OX induction medium Terrific Broth containing 12% Tryptone, 24% yeast extract, and 4%
glycerol.
Protein expression was induced by adding isopropyl-p-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG; 1 mM). After induction, the culture was shaken for an additional 72 hours at 25 C, and the periplasmic fraction was extracted by the osmotic shock method.
The FC5 sdAb was purified by immobilized metal-affinity chromatography using HiTrap ChelatingTM column (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech; Piscataway, NJ). Bound FC5 was eluted in 10 mM HEPES buffer, 500 mM NaCl, pH 7.0, with a 10-500 mM imidazole gradient and peak fractions were extensively dialyzed against 10 mM HEPES
buffer, 150 mM NaCl, 3.4 mM EDTA, pH 7.4.
Example 2: FC5-Dalargin conjugation The FC5 sdAb prepared in Example 1 was conjugated to Dalargin, as described below.
4mg of dialyzed FC5 from Example 1 was placed in a 1.5-ml micro-centrifuge tube.
Sulfo-SMCC was added to the FC5 in a 10x molar ratio; specifically, 232pl of 5mg/ml Sulfo-SMCC was added. The micro-centrifuge tube containing the mixture was then flushed with nitrogen gas and incubated for 2 hours at room temperature (RT).
Once the reaction is done, the unreacted Sulfo-SMCC was removed from the maleimide-activated FC5 using Millipore Amicon Ultra-4, Ultracel 3K column. The solution was added to the column, the volume was completed to 4 ml with PBS, and the mixture was spun at 4000xg for 13 minutes at 10 C. This process was repeated once more, and the product was washed 3 times.
Separately, and during the above steps, Dalargin-cysteamide-OH (Dalarin-cys) was reduced with TCEP. A 5mg/ml stock of Dalargin-cys dissolved in PBS was prepared and flushed with N2. Similarly, a 100mM TCEP solution in N2 flushed milli-Q
H2O. Then, 58 pl of the 100 mM TCEP was added to 261.5pl of 5mg/ml Dalargin-cys and 11 pI
of 0.5M EDTA. The mixture was then flushed with nitrogen, sealed and incubated at RT for 30 minutes.
The purified maleimide-activated FC5 was mixed with the reduced Dalargin-cys, flushed with nitrogen, sealed and incubated at RT for 90 minutes and then overnight at 4 C. The next day, the unreacted Dalargin and the TCEP were removed using Millipore Amicon Ultra-4, Ultracel 3K column. The solution was added to the column, the volume was completed to 4 ml with PBS, and the mixture was spun at 4000xg for 13 minutes at C. This process was repeated once more, and the product was washed 3 times.
The samples were then run on a 16% tricine gel (at 125 Volts for 2.5 hr at 4 C) to confirm shift in molecular weight size after conjugation. Figure 2 is a photograph of the 16% tricine gel electrophoresis of various component and by-products of the reactions.
Successful conjugation of FC5 sdAb to Dalargin-cysteamide (-1 kD) is shown.
alone has molecular weight of 14kD; FC5-Dalargin showed molecular weight of 15 kDa.
FC5 conjugate with Cy5.5 (1kD) was used as a control (MW FC5-Cy5.5 = 15 kD).
Example 3: Transport of the FC5-Dalargin across in vitro blood brain barrier model To show that the FC5-Dalargin conjugate (Example 2) maintains the blood-brain barrier permeability of FC5, an in vitro assay was used as described below.
FC5 and FC5-Dalargin were labelled by covalent conjugation to Cy5.5 N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) ester using methods recommended by the manufacturer (GE
Healthcare). Cy5.5 NHS was bound to FC5 through a thioether covalent bond.
Immortalized Adult Rat brain endothelial cells (ARBEC) were used as the in vitro blood brain barrier model. ARBEC (80,000 cells/membrane) were seeded on a 0.5%
gelatine-coated Falcon tissue culture inserts (pore size-1 pm; surface area 0.83 cm2) in 1 ml of growth medium. The bottom chamber of the insert assembly contained 2 ml of growth medium supplemented with the fetal human astrocyte-conditioned medium in a 1:1 (v/v) ratio.
Transport studies were performed 7 days post-seeding. Filter inserts were rinsed with transport buffer (PBS containing 5 mM glucose, 5 mM MgCI2, 10 mM HEPES, 0.05%
BSA, pH 7.4) and allowed to equilibrate at 37 C for 30 minutes. Experiments were initiated by adding 10 pg/ml Cy5.5-labelled FC5-Dalargin or Cy5.5-labelled FC5 to the apical chamber. Aliquots (100 pl) were collected from the opposite chamber at various time intervals (5, 15, 30, 60, 120 minutes) and replaced with fresh buffer.
The amount of FC5-Dalargin transported across HCEC monolayers was determined by fluorescence in a fluorescence plate reader. To control for ARBEC membrane integrity and to estimate paracellular diffusion, the apical-to-basolateral and basolateral-to-apical clearance rates of [14C]-sucrose was determined and calculated essentially as previously described (Muruganandam et al, 2002; Garberg et al, 2005) across the same monolayers used for FC5-Dalargin transport studies. Sample-associated radioactivity was measured using a Mircobeta Trilux liquid scintillation counter (Wallac, Finland). Sucrose permeability Pe (0-30 min) was calculated to be 0.829 x 10-3 cm/min indicative of an integral cell monolayer.
Results are summarized in Figure 3. FC5-Dalargin transmigrated across the blood-brain barrier composed of immortalized rat brain endothelial cells in this model to a level similar to FC5 alone. The results indicate that FC5-Dalargin conjugate retained the ability to cross the BBB (function of FC5). Permeability co-efficients (Pe) were as follows: FC5 = 0.195 x 10-3 cm/ min; and FC5-Dalargin = 0.250 x 10-3 cm/ min.
A
negative control single domain antibody with a molecular weight of 13 kDa equal to molecular weight of FC5 was used for comparison and gave a Pe of 0.077 x 10-3 cm/
min.
Example 4: Opioid receptor-binding studies To demonstrate that the FC5-Dalargin conjugate of Example 2 maintains opioid receptor binding activity, displacement studies were done against radiolabelled 3H-DAMGO, a p receptor agonist, in isolated rat brain membranes.
FC5 antibody binds to brain capillaries, therefore to exclude the binding of FC5 in the Dalargin-FC5 formulation, capillary depletion was initially performed.
Briefly, adult rat brain cortices were homogenized by hand in buffer A (103 mM NaCl, 4.7 mM KCI, 2.5 mM CaCI2, 1.2 mM KH2PO4, 1.2 mM MgSO4r 15 mM HEPES) in a 1/3.5 (w/v) dilution (this volume is referred to as 1 Volume). An equal volume of 30% dextran was then added to yield a final concentration of 15% dextran. The homogenate was centrifuged at 5800 x g (10,000 rpm; Beckman L8-70 Ultracentrifuge, Rotor: SW 40) for 20 min at 4 degrees. The upper parenchyma layer was then collected and centrifuged under the same conditions. The upper parenchyma layer was again collected, and 1 Volume of 50mM Tris-buffer pH 7.4 containing [2X] of protease inhibitor was added to the collected parenchyma. The mixture was homogenized using a motorized pestle. The homogenate was centrifuged at 46,000 x g for 15 minutes at 4 C. The supernatant was removed and the pellet re-suspended in 1 Volume Tris-buffer pH 7.4 containing [2X] of protease inhibitor. The re-suspended pellet was incubated at 37 C for 15 minutes with agitation in a 50 ml conical tube to dissociate endogenous opioids from receptors. After incubation, the homogenate was centrifuged at 46,000 x g for 15 minutes at 4 C. The supernatant was again removed and the pellet re-suspended in 1 to 1.5 Volume Tris-buffer pH 7.4 containing [1X] of protease inhibitor. The membrane preparation was aliquoted into 1.5 ml tubes in 1 ml samples and stored at -80 C.
Opioid Receptor binding assay used a p opioid receptor agonist, 3H-DAMGO, to bind to opioid receptors present in the rat brain membrane preparation. Displacement studies were done with unlabelled ligands, Dalargin, and Dalargin-FC5. Briefly, diluted reagents were prepared using 50mM Tris-buffer pH7.4, as follows:
i. 1 pM 3H-DAMGO: 0.25pl 20mM 3H-DAMGO and 5m1 Tris-buffer;
ii. 500nM Dalargin: 3.62p1 1.38mM Dalargin and 10ml Tris-buffer;
iii. 500nM Dalargin-cys: 3.94pl 1.27mM Dalargin-cys and 10ml Tris-buffer;
iv. 500nM FC5-Dal: 16.67pl 30pM FC5-Dal and 1 ml Tris-buffer;
v. 500nM FC5: 2.73p1 183pM FC5 and 1 ml Tris-buffer.
200pl of membrane preparation (7.15mg/ml; diluted 1:3 in Tris buffer) was added to each well of a 96-well plate. Tris-buffer was added to each well, followed by a range of Dalargin concentrations, followed by 3H-DAMGO. The reaction mixture was left at RT
with gentle orbital shaking for 1.5 hr. A scintillation cocktail was then added and radioactive counts were measured using beta scintillation counter.
To calculate IC50 and K; value for Dalargin formulas, DPM values were first converted to molar units using the equation: Molar concentration of labelled ligand [L] =
(specific counts)*(1/2200000)*(1/specific activity)*1000. Specific activity for 3H-DAMGO
was 56.8 Ci/mmol. Percentage specific bound at each concentration of unlabelled competitor was calculated using the formula: % specific bound = Bound/Total bound *100. K;
values are calculated from the obtained IC50 values by the Cheng and Prusoff equation: K;
=IC50/(1+L/Kd), where L and Kd are the concentration and affinity of the radiolabelled ligand 3H-DAMGO. The IC50 value was calculated by GraphPad Prism. K; value is the inhibition constant for the opioid (i.e, the concentration of competing ligand in a competition assay which would occupy 50% of the receptors if no radioligand were present).
Results of receptor binding competition assays are shown in Figure 4. FC5 antibody alone did not displace 3H-DAMGO. However, FC5-Dalargin demonstrated similar displacement potency to Dalargin-cys, and both were only slightly less potent than Dalargin, suggesting that FC5-Dalargin conjugate retains opioid receptor-binding activity.
Example 5: Analgesic Activity of FC5-Dalargin in Acute Pain (Tail flick assay) The Tail Flick assay was used to measure the analgesic activity of the FC5-Dalargin conjugate of Example 2. This assay is a pain receptive assay in which a mouse is placed within a restraining tube with its tail protruding. The tail is placed on a level surface, a radiant heat is applied to the tail and the latency of the mouse to remove its tail from the heat is recorded. This latency is used as a measure to indicate analgesic activity of injected compounds - analgesia is demonstrated by an increase in time to occurrence of a tail flick response. All procedures using animals were approved by the institutional animal care committee and complied with the guidelines established by the Canadian Council on Animal Care.
Male CD-1 mice (23-25 g) were obtained from Charles River and bred locally; 6-8 week old mice were used in the assay. The IITC Model 336 Plantar/Tail Analgesic Meter with True tail Temp and Heated Glass was used for the tail flick assay. In order to acclimatize the mice to the machine, each mouse was briefly placed in the restraining tube 2-3 times before the test occurred. Intensity of the lamp was adjusted to produce a latency time of 3-4 sec. The cut-off latency time (a time when the experiment is terminated) was set at 10 sec. Baseline values for tail flick latency time were determined before drug administration in each animal. Basal tail flick latency time was 3 1 seconds.
Immediately after setting/testing baseline latency time, animals were lightly anaesthetized with isoflurane and received either intra-cerebroventricular injection or intra-carotid injection of FC5-Dalargin, FC5, or Dalargin.
For intra-cerebroventricular injections, a longitudinal incision was made in the scalp to identify the bregma; then animals received a unilateral 5pl intra-cerebroventricular injection of either FC5-Dalargin or Dalargin alone approximately 2mm caudal and 1 mm lateral with respect to the bregma, and 3 mm ventral from the skull surface.
Injections were made using a Hamilton syringe equipped with a 25-gauge needle. Injection depth was controlled by a plug on the needle to prevent more than 2 mm penetration beyond the skull surface.
For intra-carotid injections, anesthesia was induced with 4% isoflurane and maintained with 2.7% isoflurane in 69% N20 and 30% 02 using a vaporizer. The left common carotid artery (CCA) was exposed and a catheter made from PE10 tubing was introduced and secured in place. A temporary ligature was placed on the left external carotid artery (ECA). In one experiment, an equimolar dose of 30 nmole of FC5-Dalargin or Dalargin alone (approx 0.86 mg/kg of Dalargin in each composition) was injected into the internal carotid artery via the CCA. In another experiment, an equimolar dose of 62 nmole of FC5-Dalargin or Dalargin alone (approximately 1.72 mg/kg of Dalargin) was also injected into the internal carotid artery via the CCA. The catheter was then removed and the CCA
was permanently tied off; the ligature of the ECA was removed. A small amount of 2%
xylocaine gel was applied to the inner surface of the wound, which was sutured closed.
Following the intra-carotid injections or intra-cerebroventricular injections, the animals were tested for tail flick latencies at 5, 10, 15, 30, 45 and 90 minutes post-injection. The nociceptive sensitivity was determined by converting the recorded analgesic tail-flick times to a percent maximal possible effect (%MPE):
% MPE = [(recorded flick time -baseline) / (maximum time (10 s) - baseline)] X
The analgesic effect of FC5-Dalargin injected intra-cerebroventricularly (Figure 6) or systemically at two doses, 0.86 mg/kg (Figure 7) and 1.72 mg/kg (Figure 8), was compared ('benchmarked') against the maximal effect of morphine at two doses (3 mg/kg, and 10 mg/kg) injected subcutaneously (Figure 5). All animals injected with the mg/kg of morphine showed maximally allowed latency of 10 sec, 30 min after injection. 3mg/kg of morphine (s.c) produced approximately 50% of the maximal analgesic effect (observed with 10 mg/kg morphine) (Figure 5).
Figure 6 shows the analgesic activity of Dalargin and Dalargin-FC5 administered intra-cerebroventricularly as described above. Dalargin and Dalargin-cys showed a similar analgesic effect reaching maximal latency of response, essentially comparable to that induced by 10 mg/kg morphine (Figure 5), 15-min and 30-min after injection and returning to basal levels 60 min after injection. FC5-Dalargin induced maximal analgesia 30 min after injection that reached 40% of maximum effect and which persisted at 10-15 % above basal levels for up to 90 min. Optimization of the dosage may result in greater % of maximum effect.
Results for the analgesic activity of Dalargin and FC5-Dalargin after intra-carotid injection at 0.86 mg/kg and 1.72 mg/kg are shown in Figure 7 and Figure 8, respectively.
Table 1 gives a comparison of %MPE among two subcutaneous doses of morphine (see Example 6), two intra-carotid does of Dalargin, and two intra-carotid doses of Dalargin-FC5 at 30 min following injection Table 1. Comparison of %MPE for morphine, Dalargin and FC5-Dalargin.
Treatment %MPE (30 min) Morphine (10mg/kg sc) 100%
Morphine (3mg/kg sc) 56%
Dalargin (0.86mg/kg ic) 19%
Dalargin (1.72mg/kg ic) 17%
FC5-Dal (0.86mg/kg ic) 63%
FC5-Dal (1.72mg/kg ic) 66%
No analgesic effect was observed after the intra-carotid injection of Dalargin; this is consistent with previous observations that Dalargin does not cross the BBB and has no analgesic effects after systemic administration. After intra-carotid injection of FC5-Dalargin, increased latency times reaching 63% and 66% of a maximal latency induced by 10 mg/kg morphine were observed 30 minutes after administration of the conjugate.
Example 6: Analgesic Activity of FC5-Dalargin in Chronic Pain (Paw flick assay) The Paw Flick test, also known as the Hargreaves Method, was used to measure the analgesic activity of the FC5-Dalargin conjugate of Example 2 in chronic pain.
Chronic inflammatory pain was induced in 4-6 week old male Wistar rats, by a intra-plantar (i.pl.) injection (100 pl with a 30-gauge needle) of complete Freund's adjuvant in sterile water in a ratio of 1:1 in the right hind paw under brief isoflurane anesthesia (3%).
Three days after CFA injection the putative antinociceptive effect of different compounds was quantified by measuring latencies of withdrawal of both hind limb paws (ipsilateral and contralateral to CFA injection) in response to radiant heat using digitalized plantar Analgesia Meter for paw stimulation (IITC Model # 336TG Life Science, Inc.). A
rapid paw withdrawal on the side of CFA injection (compared to the contralateral non-injected paw) was indicative of inflammatory pain. During the training period (before experiments), the light-intensity lamp was adjusted to elicit baseline paw withdrawal latencies between 17 to 20 s (in rats). If a withdrawal response does not occur within 20 s, the light beam was automatically turned off and the animal was assigned the maximum score. Results were analyzed as temporal courses of paw withdrawal latency (sec) versus time (min or hrs) and expressed as % of maximum possible effect (%MPE) as described in Example 5. A subcutaneous injection of morphine 10 mg/kg served as a positive control.
Intra-cerebroventricular injection: For intra-cerebroventricular injections in rats, a longitudinal incision was made in the scalp to identify the bregma; then animals received a unilateral 5p1 intra-cerebroventricular injection of either FC5-Dalargin or Dalargin alone approximately 0.8 mm anterioposterior (AP) level of bregma, 1.5mm with respect to the midline and 3.5 mm ventral from the skull surface. Injections were made using a Hamilton syringe equipped with a 25-gauge needle. Injection depth was controlled by a plug on the needle to prevent more than 3.5 mm penetration beyond the skull surface.
Subcutaneous injection of morphine at 10 mg/kg (control) resulted in prompt increase in CFA-injected paw withdrawal latency to values of the contralateral, non-inflamed paw lasting for 60 min and slowly diminishing over subsequent 3 hours (Figure 9).
Intra-cerebroventricular (icv) injection of Dalargin-cys (Figure 10) at 2 doses showed a significant analgesic effect, i.e., increase latency of inflamed paw withdrawal; a lower dose of 1.08 g achieved 75% of maximal effect, whereas a 10.08 g dose resulted in 100% MPE, with a profile similar to that obtained with morphine (Figure 9).
Similarly, icv injection of FC5-Dalargin (74.4 g - corresponding to the higher dose of Dalargin-cys from Figure 10) resulted in complete analgesia sustained over 120 min (Figure 11). IPBS
injection served as control in these experiments (Figure 11, open squares) to control for `wash-out' of analgesic used during surgical procedure of icv injections. As shown in Figure 11, the analgesic effect of anaesthesia received during the injection procedure disappears 30 min after the procedure; hence, analgesic effect observed with Dalargin lasting over 120 min is caused by intrinsic activity of Dalargin on opioid receptors and not by anaesthesia received during injection procedures.
Intravenous injection: FC5-Dalargin was then injected intravenously (in the tail vein;
7mg/kg) and its analgesic effect was compared to Dalargin-cys (0.34 mg/kg;
reflecting the Dalargin dose in FC5-Dalargin construct), to FC5 (7 mg/kg) and to the construct of Dalargin with a control anti-EGFR single domain antibody, EG2, that does not cross the blood brain barrier (EG2-Dalargin; 7 mg/kg). Given the short systemic half life of Dalargin, FC5, and FC5- and EG2-Dalargin formulations, three i.v. injections of each compound were delivered at 0, 1, and 2 hours, and the analgesic effect was monitored in paw flick assay every 15-min over a 7-hour period. Dalargin-cys did not increase latency of withdrawal of the inflamed paw at any time during and after three i.v. dosing (Figure 12, open squares). In contrast, FC5-Dalargin induced cumulative analgesia after each i.v. dosing, reaching 100% MPE 45min-1 hour after the third injection and gradually `washing-out' over a subsequent three hours (Figure 12, closed triangles), similar to what was observed after intra-cerebroventricular injections of Dalargin-cys and FC5-Dalargin (Figures 10 and 11). If Fc5-Dalargin injection was given 4th time at 3 h (Figure 12, open polygons), the 'wash-out' (i.e., disappearance of analgesic effect) was somewhat extended. Neither FC5 alone nor EG2-Dalargin construct induced any analgesic effect when administered in the same manner (i.e., 3 injections at 0, 1, and 2h) (Figure 13). These date demonstrate that, while Dalargin is potent analgesic when administered centrally, it is ineffective when administered peripherally because it does not cross the blood-brain barrier. When Dalargin is functionalized with the blood-brain barrier `carrier' single domain antibody, FC5, Dalargin becomes efficacious in inducing analgesia in chronic pain because FC5 enables its delivery across the blood brain barrier to the sites of its pharmacological action, central opioid receptors.
As humans express the same types of analgesia-inducing receptors, in this case opioid receptors, as rodents, the FC5-Dalargin construct would be capable of transmigrating the BBB in humans and acting centrally on the opioid receptors of the human brain.
Therefore, FC5-Dalargin conjugate can be used as peripherally-active analgesic for acute or chronic pain indications with improved side-effect profile compared to morphine and other opioid analgesics.
Example 7: Conjugation of FC5 with the analgesic peptide Neuropeptide Y (NPY) The FC5 sdAb prepared in Example 1 was conjugated to a neuropeptide Y (NPY) fragment (NPY-cys), as described below and shown schematically in Figure 14.
5mg of FC5 from Example 1 was placed in a 2-ml micro-centrifuge tube. Sulfo-SMCC
was added to the FC5 in a 7.5x molar ratio; specifically, 436.4u1 of the 2.5mg/ml Sulfo-SMCC was added. The micro-centrifuge tube containing the mixture was then flushed with nitrogen gas and incubated for 1 hour at room temperature (RT). Once the reaction was done, the unreacted Sulfo-SMCC was removed from the maleimide-activated using Pierce 10ml 7K Zeba column. Prior to sample loading column was washed 3 times with 5ml PBS and spun at 1000xg for 2 min. After sample loading, the column was completed with 200 l of PBS and was spun for 2 min at 1000xg.
Separately, and during the above steps, NPY-cysteamide-OH
(YPSKPDNPGEDAPAEDMARYYSALRHYINLITRQRY-cysteamide-OH) was reduced with TCEP. A 5mg/ml stock of NPY-cys was prepared in 4:1:1 milliQ H20:
acetronitile:methanol and flushed with N2. Similarly, a 25mM TCEP solution was prepared in N2-flushed milli-Q H2O. 368 l of the 25mM TCEP solution was then added to 1444 l of 5mg/ml NPY-cys solution to a final concentration of 5mM.
Finally, 18 p1 of 0.5M EDTA was added (a final concentration of 5mM), the solution was then flushed with nitrogen, sealed, vortexed and incubated on ice for 30 min.
The purified maleimide-activated FC5 (2.4 ml) was mixed with the reduced NPY-cys (1.83 ml), flushed with nitrogen, sealed and incubated overnight at 4 C. The next day, the unreacted NPY and the TCEP were removed using Amicon-15 10K column. 10ml PBS and the sample were added to the column and spun at 4000xg for 7 minutes;
volume was reduced to 5m1; the process was repeated 3 times, the final centrifugation was done for 8 min to reduce the sample to 4m1. The conjugated sample was then added to a Pierce 10ml 7K Zeba column prepared as described above, spun for 2 min at 1000xg and collected.
Conjugated samples were then run on a 16% T-SDS-PAGE non-reducing gel and silver stained to confirm shift in molecular weight size after conjugation. Figure 15 shows a photograph of the 16% T-SDS-PAGE of various components and by-products of the reactions. Successful conjugation of FC5 sdAb to NPY-cysteamide (-4.5 kD) is shown.
FC5 alone has molecular weight of 15kD; FC5-NPY conjugates consisted of one NPY
molecule per FC5 (MW - 20kD) and 2NPY molecules per FC5 (MW - 25kD).
Example 8: Analgesic Activity of FC5-NPY in Chronic Pain (Paw flick assay) The Paw Flick test described in Example 6 was used to measure the analgesic activity of the FC5-NPY conjugate of Example 7 in chronic pain.
Chronic inflammatory pain was induced in 5-7 weeks old male Wistar rats, by a intra-plantar (i.pl.) injection (100 pl with a 30-gauge needle) of complete Freund's adjuvant in sterile water in a ratio of 1:1 in the right hind paw under brief isoflurane anesthesia (3%).
Three days after CFA injection the putative antinociceptive effect of different compounds was quantified by measuring latencies of withdrawal of both hind limb paws (ipsilateral and contralateral to CFA injection) in response to radiant heat using digitalized plantar Analgesia Meter for paw stimulation (IITC Model # 336TG Life Science, Inc.). A
rapid paw withdrawal on the side of CFA injection (compared to the contralateral non-injected paw) was indicative of inflammatory pain. During the training period (before experiments), the light-intensity lamp was adjusted to elicit baseline paw withdrawal latencies between 17 to 20 s (in rats). If a withdrawal response did not occur within 20 s, the light beam was automatically turned off and the animal was assigned the maximum score. Results were analyzed as temporal courses of paw withdrawal latency (sec) versus time (min or hrs) and expressed as % of maximum possible effect (%MPE) as described in Example 5.
Intra-cerebroventricular injection: Rats received 5pI intra-cerebroventricular injections of NPY (1 g) as described in Example 6. Results are shown in Figure 16. The maximum possible analgesic effect was achieved within 15 min of icv injection of NPY, lasted for subsequent 15 min and was then `washed-out' to basal levels (no analgesia) over following 90 min.
Intravenous injection: NPY was then injected intravenously in the tail vein in two injections, each containing 2.02 mg/kg of NPY, 1 h apart from each other as described in Example 6. The analgesic effect of NPY was compared to that of FC5-NPY
conjugate injected intravenously in two injections 1 h apart, each containing 5 mg/kg (reflecting the dose of NPY received in control experiment). While NPY did not induce any analgesic effect after intravenous administration (Figure 17), FC5-NPY conjugate demonstrated an analgesic effect reaching 50-60% MPE between 30 min and 1.5 h after injection (Figure 18). These data demonstrate that neuropeptide Y (NPY), a known analgesic when administered centrally (Munglani et al, 1996) is ineffective when administered peripherally because it does not cross the blood-brain barrier. When NPY was conjugated with the blood-brain barrier `carrier' single domain antibody, FC5, the conjugate became efficacious in inducing analgesia in chronic pain model because FC5 enabled NPY delivery across the blood brain barrier to the sites of its pharmacological action, central NPY receptors (Balasubramaniam, 1997).
Humans express the same types of analgesia-inducing receptors as rodents;
thus, the FC5-NPY construct would be capable of transmigrating the BBB in humans and acting centrally on the NPY receptors of the human brain. Therefore, FC5-NPY
conjugate can be used as peripherally-acting non-opioid analgesic for the treatment of chronic pain.
Advantageously, this construct does not have typical side-effects of opioid drugs such as morphine.
NPY acts on several types of receptors, of which Y1 receptors are responsible for measured analgesic effect. In addition, NPY has shown anti-epileptogenic effect through Y2 receptors. Antiepileptiform effects of NPY have been demonstrated in hippocampal slice models. Overexpression of NPY in rats renders them resistant to the development of induced seizures (Woldbye et al, 1997; Vezzani et al, 2004). Finally, exogenous NPY
application - in vivo via an indwelling cannula or in vitro superfused on acute hippocampal slices - powerfully suppresses various forms of epileptiform activity (Woldbye et al, 1997; Baraban, 2004). This points to anti-epileptic potential of NPYergic agonists in the treatment of complex partial seizures in humans. In the central nervous system, and specifically in hippocampus (an epileptogenic brain region where limbic seizures originate), expression of Y1, Y2 and Y5 are most prominent. Both Y2 and Y5 receptors have been implicated as important `targets' for developing specific agonists for anti-seizure drugs (Woldbye et al, 1997; Redrobe et al, 1999; Baraban, 2004).
Thus, by virtue of NPY-FC5 being delivered to the brain after systemic injection, as demonstrated by the analgesic effect demonstrated herein, NPY-FC5 could also have other beneficial therapeutic effects mediated via Y receptors, such as treatment for refractory temporal lobe epilepsy, where standard treatments have failed due to developed drug resistance. Similarly, other anti-epiletogenic peptides, such as but not limited to galanin or cortistatin can be delivered across the blood-brain barrier via conjugation to FC5, for action in the brain.
The embodiments and examples described herein are illustrative and are not meant to limit the scope of the invention as claimed. Variations of the foregoing embodiments, including alternatives, modifications and equivalents, are intended by the inventors to be encompassed by the claims. Furthermore, the discussed combination of features might not be necessary for the inventive solution.
LIST OF SEQUENCES:
GAGGTCCAGCTGCAGGCGTCTGGAGGAGGATTGGTGCAGGCTGGGGGCTCTCTG
AGACTCTCCTGTGCAGCCTCTGGATTCAAAATCACTCACTATACCATGGGCTGGTT
CCGCCAGGCTCCAGGGAAGGAGCGTGAATTTGTATCACGTATTACTTGGGGTGGT
GATAACACCTTCTATTCAAACTCCGTGAAGGGCCGATTCACCATTTCCAGAGACAAC
GCCAAGAACACGGTCTATCTGCAAATGAACAGCCTGAAACCTGAGGACACGGCCG
ATTATTACTGTGCAGCAGGTTCGACGTCGACTGCGACGCCACTTAGGGTGGACTAC
TGGGGCAAAGGGACCCAGGTCACCGTCTCCTCA (SEQ ID NO:10) EVQLQASGGGLVQAGGSLRLSCAASGFKITHYTMGW FRQAPGKEREFVSRITWGGDN
TFYSNSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTVYLQM NSLKPEDTADYYCAAGSTSTATPLRVDYWGKG
TQVTVSS (SEQ ID NO:4) TMEM30A isoform I
MAMNYNAKDEVDGGPPCAPGGTAKTRRPDNTAFKQQRLPAWQPILTAGTVLPIFFIIGL
IFIPIGIGIFVTSNNIREIEIDYTGTEPSSPCNKCLSPDVTPCFCTINFTLEKSFEGNVFMYY
GLSNFYQNHRRYVKSRDDSQLNGDSSALLNPSKECEPYRRNEDKPIAPCGAIANSMFN
DTLELFLIGNDSYPIPIALKKKGIAWWTDKNVKFRNPPGGDNLEERFKGTTKPVNWLKP
VYMLDSDPDNNGFINEDFIVWMRTAALPTFRKLYRLIERKSDLHPTLPAGRYSLNVTYN
YPVHYFDGRKRMILSTISWMGGKNPFLGIAYIAVGSISFLLGWLLVINHKYRNSSNTADI
TI (SEQ ID NO:11) TMEM30A isoform 2 MAMNYNAKDEVDGGPPCAPGGTAKTRRPDNTAFKQQRLPAWQPILTAGTVLPIFFIIGL
IFIPIGIGIFVTSNNIREIEGNVFMYYGLSNFYQNHRRYVKSRDDSQLNGDSSALLNPSKE
CEPYRRNEDKPIAPCGAIANSMFNDTLELFLIGNDSYPIPIALKKKGIAWWTDKNVKFRN
PPGGDNLEERFKGTTKPVNWLKPVYMLDSDPDNNGFINEDFIVWMRTAALPTFRKLYR
LIERKSDLHPTLPAGRYSLNVTYNYPVHYFDGRKRMILSTISWMGGKNPFLGIAYIAVGSI
SFLLGWLLVINHKYRNSSNTADITI (SEQ ID NO:12) TMEM30A isoform 3 MYYGLSNFYQNHRRYVKSRDDSQLNGDSSALLNPSKECEPYRRNEDKPIAPCGAIANS
MFNDTLELFLIGNDSYPIPIALKKKGIAWWTDKNVKFRNPPGGDNLEERFKGTTKPVNW
LKPVYMLDSDPDNNGFINEDFIVWMRTAALPTFRKLYRLIERKSDLHPTLPAGRYSLNVT
YNYPVHYFDGRKRMILSTISWMGGKNPFLGIAYIAVGSISFLLGWLLVINHKYRNSSNT
ADITI (SEQ ID NO:13) TMEM30A extracellular domain GIFVTSNNIREIEIDYTGTEPSSPCNKCLSPDVTPCFCTINFTLEKSFEGNVFMYYGLSNF
YQNHRRYVKSRDDSQLNGDSSALLNPSKECEPYRRNEDKPIAPCGAIANSMFNDTLEL
FLIGNDSYPIPIALKKKGIAWWTDKNVKFRNPPGGDNLEERFKGTTKPVNWLKPVYMLD
SDPDNNGFINEDFIVWMRTAALPTFRKLYRLIERKSDLHPTLPAGRYSLNVTYNYPVHYF
DGRKRMILSTISWMGGKNP (SEQ ID NO:14) REFERENCES
All patents, patent applications and publications referred to herein and throughout the application are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Balasubramaniam AA. (1997) Neuropeptide Y family of hormones: receptor subtypes and antagonists. Peptides. 18(3):445-57.
Baraban SC: Neuropeptide Y and epilepsy: recent progress, prospects and controversies. Neuropeptides 38:261-265, 2004 Bickel, U., Yoshikawa, T., & Pardridge, W.M. Delivery of peptides and proteins through the blood-brain barrier. Adv. Drug Deliv. Rev. 46, 247-279 (2001).
Demeule M, Currie JC, Bertrand Y, Che C, Nguyen T, Regina A, Gabathuler R, Castaigne JP, Beliveau R. Involvement of the low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein in the transcytosis of the brain delivery vector angiopep-2. J
Neurochem.
106(4):1534-44. (2008) Eisenberg et al. Analysis of membrance and surface protein sequences with the hydrophobic moment plot. J. Mol. Biol., 179, 125-142.
Garberg P, Ball M, Borg N, Cecchelli R, Fenart L, Hurst RD, Lindmark T, Mabondzo A, Nilsson JE, Raub TJ, Stanimirovic D, Terasaki T, Oberg JO, Osterberg T. In vitro models for the blood-brain barrier. Toxicol In Vitro. 19(3):299-334 (2005).
Hamers-Casterman, C. et al. Naturally occurring antibodies devoid of light chains.
Nature 363, 446-448 (1993).
Herve F, Ghinea N, Scherrmann JM. CNS delivery via adsorptive transcytosis.
AAPS
J.10(3):455-72. (2008) Jespers, L., Schon, 0., Famm, K. & Winter, G. Aggregation-resistant domain antibodies selected on phage by heat denaturation. Nat Biotechnol 22, 1161-1165 (2004).
Jones AR, Shusta EV. Blood-brain barrier transport of therapeutics via receptor-mediation. Pharm Res. 24(9):1759-71 (2007) Kabat EA, Wu TT. Identical V region amino acid sequences and segments of sequences in antibodies of different specificities. Relative contributions of VH and VL
genes, minigenes, and complementarity-determining regions to binding of antibody-combining sites. J Immunol. 1991;147:1709-19.
Kabat, E. A., Wu, T. T., Perry, H. M, Gottesman, K. S., and Koeler, C. (ed.) (1991) Sequences of Proteins of Immunological Interest. US Department of Health and Human Services, US Public Health Service, Bethesda, MD.
Munglani R, Hudspith MJ, Hunt SP (1996) The therapeutic potential of neuropeptide Y.
Analgesic, anxiolytic and anti hypertensive. Drugs. 52(3):371-89.
Murriel CL, Dowdy SF. Influence of protein transduction domains on intracellular delivery of macromolecules. Expert Opin Drug Deliv. 3(6):739-46.(2006) Muruganandam A, Tanha J, Narang S, Stanimirovic D. Selection of phage-displayed llama single-domain antibodies that transmigrate across human blood-brain barrier endothelium. FASEB J. 16(2):240-2. (2002) Niederberger E, Kuhlein H, Geisslinger G. Update on the pathobiology of neuropathic pain. Expert Rev Proteomics. 5(6):799-818 (2008) Nuttall, S.D. et al. Isolation and characterization of an IgNAR variable domain specific for the human mitochondrial translocase receptor Tom70. European journal of biochemistry / FEBS 270, 3543-3554 (2003).
Padlan, E.A. Anatomy of the antibody molecule. Molecular immunology 31, 169-(1994).
Pardridge, W.M. Drug and gene delivery to the brain: The vascular route.
Neuron 36:555-558 (2002).
Pardridge, W.M., Buciak, J.L., & Friden, P.M. Selective transport of an anti-transferrin receptor antibody through the blood-brain barrier in vivo. J. Pharmacol. Exp.
Ther. 259, 66-70 (1991).
Pencheva N, Pospisek J, Hauzerova L, Barth T, Milanov P. Activity profiles of dalargin and its analogues in mu-, delta- and kappa-opioid receptor selective bioassays. Br J
Pharmacol. 128(3):569-76 (1999).
Polt R, Dhanasekaran M, Keyari CM. Glycosylated neuropeptides: a new vista for neuropsychopharmacology? Med Res Rev. 25(5):557-85 (2005).
Redrobe JP, Dumont Y, St-Pierre J-A, Quirion R: Multiple receptors for neuropeptide Y
in the hippocampus: putative roles in seizures and cognition Brain Research 848:153-166, 1999 Rousselle C, Clair P, Smirnova M, Kolesnikov Y, Pasternak GW, Gac-Breton S, Rees AR, Scherrmann JM, Temsamani J. Improved brain uptake and pharmacological activity of dalargin using a peptide-vector-mediated strategy. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 306(1):371-6 (2003).
Smith HS. Peripherally-acting opioids. Pain Physician. 11(2 Suppl):S121-32.
(2008) To, R. et al. Isolation of monomeric human V(H)s by a phage selection. J Biol Chem 280, 41395-41403 (2005).
Trescot AM, Datta S, Lee M, Hansen H. Opioid pharmacology. Pain Physician.
11(2 Su ppl ): S 133-53 (2008) Vezzani A, Sperk G: Overexpression of NPY and Y2 receptors in epileptic brain tissue:
an endogenous neuroprotective mechanism in temporal lobe epilepsy?
Neuropeptides 38:245-252,2004.
Weber, S. J., Greene, D. L., Sharma, S. D., Yamamura, H. I., Kramer, T. H., Burks, T.
F., Hruby, J. H., Hersh, L. B. and Davis, T. P.: Distribution and antinociception of [3H]cyclic [D-Pent, D-Pen5]enkephalin and two halogenated analogs after intravenous administration. J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 259: 1109-1117, 1991 Woldbye DP, Larsen PJ, Mikkelsen JD, Klemp K, Madsen TM, Bolwig TG. Powerful inhibition of kainic acid seizures by neuropeptide Y via Y5-like receptors.
Nat Med.
3(7):761-4, 1997 Woldbye DPD: Antiepileptic effects of NPY on pentylenetetrazole seizures.
Regulatory Peptides 75-76:279-282, 1998 Xapelli S, Agasse F, Ferreira R, Silva AP, Malva JO.: Neuropeptide Y as an endogenous antiepileptic, neuroprotective and pro-neurogenic peptide. Recent Pat CNS Drug Discov.;1(3):315-24, 2006
5 (Muruganandam et al). WO 2007/036021 (Abulrob et al) US Patent No. 6,180,370 US Patent No. 5,693,761 US Patent No. 6,054,297 US Patent No. 5,859,205 US Patent No. 5,869,619 US Patent No. 5,766,886 US Patent No. 5,821,123 European Patent No. 626390 European Patent No. 519596
Claims (14)
1. A compound comprising an antibody or fragment thereof capable of transmigrating across the blood brain barrier (BBB) and an analgesic peptide.
2. The compound of claim 1, wherein the antibody or fragment thereof binds TMEM30A.
3. The compound of claim 1 or 2, wherein the analgesic peptide acts on opioid receptors, neuropeptide Y receptors, neurotensin receptors, galanin receptors, orexin receptors, somatostatin receptors, or any combination thereof.
4. The compound of any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein the antibody or fragment thereof comprises:
complementarity determining region (CDR) 1 sequence HYTMG (SEQ ID NO:1);
CDR2 sequence RITWGGDNTFYSNSVKG (SEQ ID NO:2); and CDR3 sequence GSTSTATPLRVDY (SEQ ID NO:3).
complementarity determining region (CDR) 1 sequence HYTMG (SEQ ID NO:1);
CDR2 sequence RITWGGDNTFYSNSVKG (SEQ ID NO:2); and CDR3 sequence GSTSTATPLRVDY (SEQ ID NO:3).
5. The compound of any one of claims 1 to 4, wherein the antibody or fragment thereof comprises the sequence:
EVQLQASGGGLVQAGGSLRLSCAASGFKITHYTMGWFRQAPGKEREFVSRITWGGDN
TFYSNSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTVYLQMNSLKPEDTADYYCAAGSTSTATPLRVDYWGKG
TQVTVSS (SEQ ID NO:4), or a sequence substantially identical thereto.
EVQLQASGGGLVQAGGSLRLSCAASGFKITHYTMGWFRQAPGKEREFVSRITWGGDN
TFYSNSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTVYLQMNSLKPEDTADYYCAAGSTSTATPLRVDYWGKG
TQVTVSS (SEQ ID NO:4), or a sequence substantially identical thereto.
6. The compound of any one of claims 1 to 5, wherein the antibody or fragment thereof is a single domain antibody (sdAb).
7. The compound of any one of claims 1 to 6, wherein the analgesic peptide is an endogenous or exogenous analgesic peptide.
8. The compound of any one of claims 1 to 6, wherein the analgesic peptide is selected from the group consisting of opioid peptides, endorphins, enkephalins and dynorphins, galanin, neurotensin, neuropeptide Y, somatostatin, orexin A and B, conotoxin-derived peptides, analgesic peptides purified or derived from venoms of scorpion, cone shells, tarantula, or other species.
9. The compound of any one of claims 1 to 6, wherein the analgesic peptide is selected from the group consisting of Dalargin and neuropeptide-Y or a fragment thereof
10. A composition comprising the compound of any one of claims 1 to 9 and a pharmaceutically acceptable diluent, carrier, or excipient.
11. A method of treating pain comprising administering a compound according to any one of claims 1 to 9 or a composition according to claim 8.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein the pain is associated with arthritis, post-operative pain, cancer-related pain, HIV-related pain, or neuropathic pain syndromes.
13. A method of preventing or treating epileptic seizures comprising administering a compound according to any one of claims 1 to 7 or a composition according to claim 8, wherein the analgesic peptide has anti-epileptogenic activity.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein the analgesic peptide is NPY or a fragment thereof, galanin, or cortistatin.
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US32403610P | 2010-04-14 | 2010-04-14 | |
US61/324,036 | 2010-04-14 | ||
PCT/CA2011/000416 WO2011127580A1 (en) | 2010-04-14 | 2011-04-13 | Compositions and methods for brain delivery of analgesic peptides |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
CA2796215A1 true CA2796215A1 (en) | 2011-10-20 |
CA2796215C CA2796215C (en) | 2021-05-18 |
Family
ID=44798214
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
CA2796215A Active CA2796215C (en) | 2010-04-14 | 2011-04-13 | Compositions and methods for brain delivery of analgesic peptides |
Country Status (4)
Country | Link |
---|---|
US (1) | US8986689B2 (en) |
EP (1) | EP2558503B1 (en) |
CA (1) | CA2796215C (en) |
WO (1) | WO2011127580A1 (en) |
Cited By (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
CN108992661A (en) * | 2018-09-18 | 2018-12-14 | 北京大学深圳研究生院 | Application of polypeptide in preparation of intravenous, intraperitoneal or nasal administration medicine |
Families Citing this family (23)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO2004060403A2 (en) * | 2003-01-06 | 2004-07-22 | Angiochem Inc. | Aprotinin and anglos as carriers across the blood-brain barrier |
US9365634B2 (en) * | 2007-05-29 | 2016-06-14 | Angiochem Inc. | Aprotinin-like polypeptides for delivering agents conjugated thereto to tissues |
CN102026667B (en) | 2008-04-18 | 2014-06-25 | 安吉奥开米公司 | Pharmaceutical compositions of paclitaxel, paclitaxel analogs or paclitaxel conjugates and related methods of preparation and use |
MX2011004019A (en) | 2008-10-15 | 2011-06-24 | Angiochem Inc | Etoposide and doxorubicin conjugates for drug delivery. |
JP2012505637A (en) | 2008-10-15 | 2012-03-08 | アンジオケム,インコーポレーテッド | GLP-1 agonist conjugates and uses thereof |
CA2745524C (en) | 2008-12-05 | 2020-06-09 | Angiochem Inc. | Conjugates of neurotensin or neurotensin analogs and uses thereof |
BRPI0922611A2 (en) | 2008-12-17 | 2018-11-06 | Angiochem Inc | type 1 membrane matrix metalloprotein inhibitors and uses thereof |
CA2759129C (en) | 2009-04-20 | 2018-12-11 | Angiochem Inc. | Treatment of ovarian cancer using an anticancer agent conjugated to an angiopep-2 analog |
MX2012000016A (en) | 2009-07-02 | 2012-03-26 | Angiochem Inc | Multimeric peptide conjugates and uses thereof. |
WO2013106577A2 (en) * | 2012-01-10 | 2013-07-18 | Biogen Idec Ma Inc. | Enhancement of transport of therapeutic molecules across the blood brain barrier |
WO2014152497A2 (en) | 2013-03-15 | 2014-09-25 | The Trustees Of Columbia University In The City Of New York | Osteocalcin as a treatment for cognitive disorders |
EP2896402A1 (en) | 2014-01-20 | 2015-07-22 | Vect-Horus | Activated neurotensin molecules and the uses thereof |
UA120048C2 (en) | 2014-03-06 | 2019-09-25 | Нешнл Рісеч Каунсіл Оф Канада | Insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor -specific antibodies and uses thereof |
KR102355310B1 (en) | 2014-03-06 | 2022-01-24 | 내셔날 리서치 카운실 오브 캐나다 | Insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor-specific antibodies and uses thereof |
CN106536555B (en) | 2014-03-06 | 2019-10-18 | 加拿大国家研究委员会 | Type-1 insulin like growth factor receptor specific antibody and application thereof |
JP7175608B2 (en) | 2014-11-19 | 2022-11-21 | ザ トラスティーズ オブ コロンビア ユニバーシティ イン ザ シティ オブ ニューヨーク | Osteocalcin as a treatment for age-related frailty |
ES2826827T3 (en) | 2015-06-15 | 2021-05-19 | Angiochem Inc | Methods for the treatment of leptomeningeal carcinomatosis |
BR112019000220A2 (en) | 2016-07-06 | 2019-04-24 | National Research Council Of Canada | humanized antibodies that transmigrate the blood-brain barrier and their uses |
CA3046906A1 (en) | 2016-12-12 | 2018-06-21 | National Research Council Of Canada | Antibody variants transmigrating the blood-brain barrier and uses thereof |
CA3052058A1 (en) | 2017-01-30 | 2018-08-02 | National Research Council Of Canada | Blood-brain barrier transmigrating compounds and uses thereof |
RU2672888C1 (en) | 2018-04-18 | 2018-11-20 | Пивипи Лабс Пте. Лтд. | Anti-viral immunotropic agent for treatment of arvi |
RU2687485C1 (en) * | 2018-09-12 | 2019-05-14 | Пивипи Лабс Пте. Лтд. | Agent for therapy of wound and burn skin lesions |
WO2021211006A1 (en) * | 2020-04-13 | 2021-10-21 | Federal State Budgetary Institution Center Of Biomedical Technologies Of Federal Medical And Biological Agency | Inhaled hexapeptide for treating interleukin-6 related respiratory diseases |
Family Cites Families (9)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US5530101A (en) | 1988-12-28 | 1996-06-25 | Protein Design Labs, Inc. | Humanized immunoglobulins |
GB8928874D0 (en) | 1989-12-21 | 1990-02-28 | Celltech Ltd | Humanised antibodies |
US5859205A (en) | 1989-12-21 | 1999-01-12 | Celltech Limited | Humanised antibodies |
DE69233482T2 (en) | 1991-05-17 | 2006-01-12 | Merck & Co., Inc. | Method for reducing the immunogenicity of antibody variable domains |
WO1994004679A1 (en) | 1991-06-14 | 1994-03-03 | Genentech, Inc. | Method for making humanized antibodies |
CA2103887C (en) | 1991-12-13 | 2005-08-30 | Gary M. Studnicka | Methods and materials for preparation of modified antibody variable domains and therapeutic uses thereof |
US5869619A (en) | 1991-12-13 | 1999-02-09 | Xoma Corporation | Modified antibody variable domains |
US7943129B2 (en) | 2000-05-26 | 2011-05-17 | National Research Council Of Canada | Single-domain brain-targeting antibody fragments derived from llama antibodies |
EP1943341A4 (en) * | 2005-09-27 | 2010-07-07 | Ca Nat Research Council | Blood-brain barrier epitopes and uses thereof |
-
2011
- 2011-04-13 EP EP11768320.1A patent/EP2558503B1/en active Active
- 2011-04-13 CA CA2796215A patent/CA2796215C/en active Active
- 2011-04-13 US US13/640,842 patent/US8986689B2/en active Active
- 2011-04-13 WO PCT/CA2011/000416 patent/WO2011127580A1/en active Application Filing
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
CN108992661A (en) * | 2018-09-18 | 2018-12-14 | 北京大学深圳研究生院 | Application of polypeptide in preparation of intravenous, intraperitoneal or nasal administration medicine |
CN108992661B (en) * | 2018-09-18 | 2019-09-20 | 北京大学深圳研究生院 | Application of polypeptide in preparation of intravenous, intraperitoneal or nasal administration medicine |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
CA2796215C (en) | 2021-05-18 |
EP2558503A1 (en) | 2013-02-20 |
EP2558503B1 (en) | 2015-12-09 |
US8986689B2 (en) | 2015-03-24 |
WO2011127580A1 (en) | 2011-10-20 |
US20130034572A1 (en) | 2013-02-07 |
EP2558503A4 (en) | 2014-01-22 |
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
EP2558503B1 (en) | Compositions and methods for brain delivery of analgesic peptides | |
ES2813432T3 (en) | Modified proteins and peptides | |
TWI728953B (en) | Methods for treating or preventing migraine headache | |
US10758556B2 (en) | Anthracycline-based antibody drug conjugates having high in vivo tolerability | |
CA3082160C (en) | Anti-mesothelin antibody and antibody drug conjugate thereof | |
US20220002436A1 (en) | Anti-her2 polypeptides and methods of use thereof | |
TR201809743T4 (en) | Increasing the transport of therapeutic molecules through the blood brain barrier. | |
KR20170138451A (en) | Anti-C-MET Antibodies and Anti-C-MET Antibody-Cytotoxic Drug Conjugates and Their Pharmaceutical Uses | |
JP2023123757A (en) | Affinity-based methods for using transferrin receptor-binding proteins | |
CN107847593B (en) | Therapeutic antibodies and uses thereof | |
SG189682A1 (en) | Drug fusions and conjugates | |
WO2014111550A1 (en) | Modified anti-serum albumin binding proteins | |
TW201006496A (en) | Anti-angiogenic compounds | |
EA035517B1 (en) | Insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor-specific antibodies and uses thereof | |
TW201446792A (en) | Potent and selective inhibitors of Nav1.7 | |
US20240325556A1 (en) | Methods of Using Antibody-Drug-Conjugates | |
US20180028682A1 (en) | Maytansine-drug conjugates of her-2 specific binding proteins generated by site specific sortase-enzyme mediated conjugation | |
KR20200041998A (en) | Anti-EGFR antibody drug conjugates (ADCs) and uses thereof | |
KR20210119421A (en) | CD38-BINDING PROTEINS COMPRISING DE-IMMUNIZED SHIGA TOXIN A SUBUNIT EFFECTORS Containing Deimmunized Shiga Toxin A Subunit Effectors | |
JP2021522231A (en) | Thioether Cyclic Peptide Amyrin Receptor Regulator | |
STANIMIROVIC et al. | Patent 2796215 Summary | |
US12121527B2 (en) | Anthracycline-based antibody drug conjugates having high in vivo tolerability | |
JP2023546293A (en) | Anti-CSPG4 binding agents, conjugates thereof and methods of use thereof | |
JP2024527235A (en) | Anti-EGFRvIII antibody drug conjugates and uses thereof | |
FR3147278A1 (en) | TNFR2-BINDING POLYPEPTIDES AND METHODS OF USE |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
EEER | Examination request |
Effective date: 20160406 |